Baym shares 2011 Eugene Feenberg Memorial Medal with Keldysh

10/4/2011 Celia Elliott

The selection committee for the 2011 Eugene Feenberg Memorial Medal announced today that prize will be shared by UI Professor of Physics Emeritus Gordon Baym and Leonid Keldysh, former director of the Lebedev Physical Institute (1988-1994), now at Texas A&M University. The two were honored for their fundamental contributions to many-body theory.

Written by Celia Elliott

Professor of Physics and George and Anne Fisher Professor of Engineering Emeritus Gordon Baym will share the 2011 Eugene Feenberg Memorial Medal for his contributions to many-body physics.

Baym was cited "for the self-consistent conserving approach to many-body perturbation theory that provided a solid platform for perturbative expansions, and for his novel applications of quantum many-body methods to nuclear physics, astrophysics, highly condensed matter, and atomic physics." He will receive the award at a special ceremony during the 16th Recent Progress in Many-Body Physics international conference in Bariloche, Argentina in late November.  

Also sharing the 2011 Medal is Leonid Keldysh, the former director of the Lebedev Physical Institute (Soviet Academy of Sciences, Moscow). He is now a professor of physics at Texas A&M University. Keldysh was recognized for his extension of many-body perturbation theory to non-equilibrium systems.

The Eugene Feenberg Memorial Medal was established in 1983 by the many-body physics community to honor the enduring contributions of Eugene Feenberg to physics, especially to the foundations of nuclear physics and to microscopic quantum many-body physics of nuclei and quantum fluids. The medal is presented under the auspices of the International Advisory Committee for the RPMBT series of international conferences.

Baym is one of four Illinois physics faculty members to have received this prestigious international prize. Previous UI faculty recipients are David Pines (1985), David M. Ceperley (1994), and Anthony J. Leggett (1999). Physics Illinois alumnus Malvin Kalos was awarded the Feenberg Medal in 1989.

About Gordon Baym

Baym received his bachelor's degree in physics from Cornell University in 1956, his A.M. in mathematics from Harvard in 1957, and his Ph.D. in physics from Harvard in 1960. He joined the Department of Physics at the University of Illinois as an assistant professor in 1963.

An international leader in the study of matter under extreme conditions, Baym has made original, seminal contributions to our understanding of physical systems ranging from neutron stars and nuclei, quark-gluon plasmas, and ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions, to condensed matter physics, quantum fluids, and most recently, ultracold trapped atomic gases.

Baym is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society. He received the American Physical Society's Hans A. Bethe Prize in 2002 and the Lars Onsager Prize in 2008.


Madeline Stover is a physics doctoral student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign studying atmospheric dynamics applied to forest conservation. She interns as a science writer for Illinois Physics, where she also co-hosts the podcast Emergence along with fellow physics graduate student Mari Cieszynski. When Stover is not doing research or communications, she enjoys hosting her local radio show, singing with her band, and cooking with friends.

Daniel Inafuku graduated from Illinois Physics with a PhD and now works as a science writer. At Illinois, he conducted scientific research in mathematical biology and mathematical physics. In addition to his research interests, Daniel is a science video media creator.

Karmela Padavic-Callaghan, Ph. D. is a science writer and an educator. She teaches college and high school physics and mathematics courses, and her writing has been published in popular science outlets such as WIREDScientific AmericanPhysics World, and New Scientist. She earned a Ph. D. in Physics from UIUC in 2019 and currently lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Garrett R. Williams is an Illinois Physics Ph.D. Candidate and science writer. He has been recognized as the winner of the 2020 APS History of Physics Essay Competition and as a finalist in the 2021 AAAS Science and Human Rights Essay Competition. He was also an invited author in the 2021 #BlackinPhysics Week series published by Physics Today and Physics World

 

Jamie Hendrickson is a writer and content creator in higher education communications. They earned their M.A. in Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 2021. In addition to their communications work, they are a published area studies scholar and Russian-to-English translator.

Karmela Padavic-Callaghan, Ph. D. is a science writer and an educator. She teaches college and high school physics and mathematics courses, and her writing has been published in popular science outlets such as WIREDScientific AmericanPhysics World, and New Scientist. She earned a Ph. D. in Physics from UIUC in 2019 and currently lives in Brooklyn, NY.


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This story was published October 4, 2011.