<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> CRC会員 各位                CRC事務局 *****************ICRC2019でのアワード推薦締切(2/28)****************************** CRCの皆様 名大ISEE/KMIの伊藤です。 ICRC2019でのIUPAP C4関連アワードの推薦締め切りが 2月28日と迫っています。 日本のコミュニティからも積極的な推薦をぜひご検討ください。 下記に各アワードの簡単な紹介を引用します。 しかるべき推薦があれば、各人からそれぞれのアワードの コンタクト先へ直接推薦をお願いします。 推薦者の他に2名のサポートレターも同時に必要です。 (取りまとめて送る必要はありません) 詳細は https://www.icrc2019.org/ の"Prizes & Awards"のタブをご確認ください。 伊藤 ------------------------------------------------- 1. IUPAP Young Scientist Award The IUPAP Young Scientist Awards have been established in 2006 by IUPAP for the recognition of research by young scientists with a maximum of 8 years research experience following a PhD (excluding career interruptions). Any scientist working in a field of interest for the C4 Commission is eligible for these awards. The selection will be made by the C4 Commission. Two awards, each consisting of a certificate, a medal and a cheque for Euro 1000, will be presented at the 36th ICRC in Madison, WI, USA, in July 2019. 2. Homi Bhabha Medal and Prize The IUPAP-TIFR Homi Bhabha Medal and Prize was established by the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP) and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR), Mumbai, India in 2010 to honor Dr. Homi Jehangir Bhabha, a cosmic ray physicist well-known for the Bhabha-Heitler cascade theory and relativistic positron-electron scattering, also known as Bhabha scattering. Homi Bhabha founded the TIFR in 1945 and initiated the nuclear energy program in India in 1951 with strong support from the well-known philanthropist and industrialist JRD Tata and the Government of India then led by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Homi Bhabha initiated experimental programs for the study of cosmic ray particles and their interactions with instruments either carried aloft to the top of the atmosphere with balloons or placed in laboratories at high altitude or deep underground. The Homi Bhabha Medal and Prize consists of a certificate, a medal, an award of INR 250,000 and an invitation to visit the TIFR, Mumbai, and the Cosmic Ray Laboratory, Ooty to give public lectures there, and will be awarded biennially at the International Cosmic Ray Conferences (ICRCs), held generally in odd numbered years 3.O'Ceallaigh Medal The O'Ceallaigh Medal was established by the estate of the late Prof. Cormac O'Ceallaigh and the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies to honour "outstanding contributions to cosmic ray physics" and is awarded by the Commission on Astroparticle Physics (C4) of the IUPAP. The Commission wishes to use this award to recognize significant contributions to our field over an extended career. The selection will be made by the commission and the medal will be presented at the 36th International Cosmic Ray Conference in Madison, WI, USA, on 25 July 2019. 4. Shakti P. Duggal Award The Shakti P. Duggal Award was established in 1983 to recognize outstanding work by a young scientist in the field of cosmic ray physics. The award consists of a prize of US $1,500 to be presented at the opening ceremony of the 36th ICRC, July 24, 2019 in Madison, Wisconsin. The winner is invited to visit the Bartol Research Institute at the University of Delaware to present a colloquium at some time during the following year. The intent of this award is to recognize and inspire young cosmic ray scientists early in their careers. The recipient will not have attained the age of 36 on January 1, 2019. Subject to this age limitation, any person from anywhere in the world who has contributed significantly to the field of cosmic ray physics including astroparticle physics is eligible for consideration. The selection of the prize winner will be made by an International Committee. 5. Yodh Prize The Yodh Prize was established in 1998 and recognizes a scientist whose research career has had a major impact on the understanding of cosmic rays. The Prize was endowed by Gaurang and Kanwal Yodh to the University of California Irvine Foundation. The awardee is selected by an international committee of distinguished scientists in the field of cosmic ray and astroparticle physics. There is no age restriction. The award consists of a prize of US $2,000 and will be presented at the 36th ICRC in Madison, WI, USA, in July 2019. The winner will also be invited to visit the University of California, Irvine to present a Department of Physics and Astronomy Colloquium at some time during the following year. ****************************************************************************