The Nobel Prize in Physics for 2010 has been awarded to Andre Geim and
Konstantin Novoselov, both at the University of Manchester, UK, “for
groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material graphene”.
Referring to graphene as "the perfect atomic lattice", the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences, which also awards the Nobel prizes in chemistry and
economics, credit Geim and Novoselov for showing that graphene, which is
a thin flake of ordinary carbon, "has exceptional properties that
originate from the remarkable world of quantum physics."
For more details about this year's Nobel prize winners and their work,
please visit
the official website.
Geim and Novoselov have been active participants in ICTP educational
activities. Both lectured at ICTP's "Graphene Week 2008" conference,
which was devoted to the rapidly progressing science and technology of
graphene and ultra-thin graphitic films. Geim was also a lecturer at ICTP's College on Physics of Nano-devices in 2006 and a tutor at ICTP's
Research Workshop on Condensed Matter Physics in 1997. Novoselov
was a speaker at the 2007 Conference on Quantum Phenomena in Confined
Dimensions.
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2010 Physics Nobel Announced
Award goes to graphene researchers with ties to ICTP
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