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Fig.:
MPA-Director Rashid Sunyaev
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The Benjamin Franklin Medals are awarded annually and span seven
disciplines of science: chemistry, computer and cognitive science,
earth and environmental science, electrical engineering, life science,
mechanical engineering, and physics. The first Franklin Medal in
Physics was awarded in 1915 and it is one of the most prestigious
awards in Physics. Among previous Laureates are: 1926 — Niels
Bohr, 1927 - Max Planck, 1935 - Albert Einstein, 1980 - Lyman Spitzer,
Jr.
The gold medals will be awarded to the 2012 laureates during the
annual Franklin Institute Awards Ceremony on Thursday, 26 April
2012. During the Awards Week, the 2012 Laureates will take part in a
seminar or lecture focusing on their specific area of expertise at
various universities throughout the city.
Rashid Sunyaev works on many fields in theoretical astrophysics,
ranging from cosmology and high energy astrophysics to X-ray astronomy
and space research. He is interested in the interaction of matter and
radiation under astrophysical conditions and has provided many
important contributions to observational cosmology. In the late 1960s
and early 1970s, together with his colleague Yakov Zeldovich he
described how the cosmic background radiation is altered when passing
through the hot gas in galaxy clusters, which is now known as the
Sunyaev-Zeldovich-Effect. Together with Nikolai Shakura he published a
paper about the structure of accretion discs around black holes, both
stellar black holes in binary star systems and massive black holes in
active galactic nuclei. For all his influential works in astrophysics
he received many international awards and honours and is member of
many academies and professional societies.
Further Information:
More Information about the Franklin Institute Awards
Prof. Rashid A. Sunyaev
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