IEEE Photonics Award explained

IEEE Photonics Award
Awarded For:Outstanding achievements in photonics
Presenter:Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Year:2002
Website:IEEE Photonics Award

The IEEE Photonics Award is a Technical Field Award established by the IEEE Board of Directors in 2002.[1] This award is presented for outstanding achievements in photonics, including work relating to: light-generation, transmission, deflection, amplification and detection and the optical/electro-optical componentry and instrumentation used to accomplish these functions. Also included are storage technologies utilizing photonics to read or write data and optical display technologies. It also extends from energy generation/propagation, communications, information processing, storage and display, biomedical and medical uses of light and measurement applications.[2]

This award may be presented to an individual or a team of up to three people. Recipients of this award receive a bronze medal, certificate, and honorarium.

Recipients

For leadership in the introduction and development of digital coherent signal processing for optical fiber transmission systems.

For pioneering research in integrated photonics, including silicon, silicon-nitride, III-V devices, and their heterogeneous integration.

For contributions to photonic device modelling and bridging the gap between device and system-level performance, including energy consumption.

For seminal and sustained contributions to the development and commercialization of vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSEL).

For sustained pioneering research, development, and commercialization of photonic integrated circuits and devices for telecommunications.

For pioneering contributions to silicon photonics.

For seminal contributions to ultrafast laser technology enabling important industrial applications and novel scientific breakthroughs.

For pioneering research in silicon photonics, including hybrid silicon lasers, photonic integrated circuits, and ultra-lowloss waveguides.

For scientific and technical leadership in the conception, demonstration, and development of phosphorescent materials in organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays.

For pioneering contributions to the conception and realization of photonic crystal fibers.

For pioneering the development and commercialization of optical coherence tomography for medical diagnostics.

For the discovery of the Ti:Sapphire laser and the development of many novel solidstate laser systems and applications.

For pioneering contributions to photonic crystals, the photonic bandgap and photonic bandgap engineering.

For fundamental contributions to photonics science, engineering and education that have broadly impacted quantum electronics and lightwave communications.

For seminal contributions to electro-optic modulation, integrated optics, and semiconductor lasers, and leadership in optical telecommunications.

For seminal contributions to nonlinear optics and solid-state lasers for commercial applications from precision measurement to manufacturing.

For seminal and sustained contributions to the development of high-speed, low-noise long wavelength avalanche photodiodes.

For pioneering contributions to the development and commercialization of optical fiber-based technologies for communications, sensors, and high power applications.

For technical leadership, commercialization and practical deployment of photonic component technologies for optical communications.

For seminal contributions to enabling photonics technologies and for visionary leadership in their application to networks and systems.

For leadership, vision and pioneering contributions in the fields of optical fiber communications and laser science.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: IEEE Photonics Award. 2020-11-11. IEEE.
  2. Web site: IEEE Photonics Award . 2023-12-02 . IEEE Awards . en-US.