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Nuclear Fusion prize laudation
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Clean energy in abundance will be of critical importance to the pursuit of world peace and development. As part of the IAEA's activities to facilitate the dissemination of fusion related science and technology, the journal Nuclear Fusion is intended to contribute to the realization of such energy from fusion.
In 2010, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the IAEA journal. The excellence of research published in the journal is attested to by its high citation index. The IAEA recognizes excellence by means of an annual prize awarded to the authors of papers judged to have made the greatest impact. On the occasion of the 2010 IAEA Fusion Energy Conference in Daejeon, Republic of Korea at the welcome dinner hosted by the city of Daejeon, we celebrated the achievements of the 2009 and 2010 Nuclear Fusion prize winners.
Steve Sabbagh, from the Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics, Columbia University, New York is the winner of the 2009 award for his paper:
'Resistive wall stabilized operation in rotating high beta NSTX plasmas' [1].
This is a landmark paper which reports record parameters of beta in a large spherical torus plasma and presents a thorough investigation of the physics of resistive wall mode (RWM) instability. The paper makes a significant contribution to the critical topic of RWM stabilization.
John Rice, from the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT, Cambridge is the winner of the 2010 award for his paper:
'Inter-machine comparison of intrinsic toroidal rotation in tokamaks' [2].
The 2010 award is for a seminal paper that analyzes results across a range of machines in order to develop a universal scaling that can be used to predict intrinsic rotation. This paper has already triggered a wealth of experimental and theoretical work.
I congratulate both authors and their colleagues on these exceptional papers.
W. Burkart
Deputy Director General
Department of Nuclear Sciences and Applications
International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria
References
[1] Sabbagh S. et al 2006 Nucl. Fusion
46 635–44
[2] Rice J.E. et al 2007 Nucl. Fusion
47 1618–24
Title: Nuclear Fusion prize laudation
Description:
Clean energy in abundance will be of critical importance to the pursuit of world peace and development.
As part of the IAEA's activities to facilitate the dissemination of fusion related science and technology, the journal Nuclear Fusion is intended to contribute to the realization of such energy from fusion.
In 2010, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the IAEA journal.
The excellence of research published in the journal is attested to by its high citation index.
The IAEA recognizes excellence by means of an annual prize awarded to the authors of papers judged to have made the greatest impact.
On the occasion of the 2010 IAEA Fusion Energy Conference in Daejeon, Republic of Korea at the welcome dinner hosted by the city of Daejeon, we celebrated the achievements of the 2009 and 2010 Nuclear Fusion prize winners.
Steve Sabbagh, from the Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics, Columbia University, New York is the winner of the 2009 award for his paper:
'Resistive wall stabilized operation in rotating high beta NSTX plasmas' [1].
This is a landmark paper which reports record parameters of beta in a large spherical torus plasma and presents a thorough investigation of the physics of resistive wall mode (RWM) instability.
The paper makes a significant contribution to the critical topic of RWM stabilization.
John Rice, from the Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT, Cambridge is the winner of the 2010 award for his paper:
'Inter-machine comparison of intrinsic toroidal rotation in tokamaks' [2].
The 2010 award is for a seminal paper that analyzes results across a range of machines in order to develop a universal scaling that can be used to predict intrinsic rotation.
This paper has already triggered a wealth of experimental and theoretical work.
I congratulate both authors and their colleagues on these exceptional papers.
W.
Burkart
Deputy Director General
Department of Nuclear Sciences and Applications
International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria
References
[1] Sabbagh S.
et al 2006 Nucl.
Fusion
46 635–44
[2] Rice J.
E.
et al 2007 Nucl.
Fusion
47 1618–24.
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