Wolf Prize in Physics

The Wolf Prize in Physics is awarded once a year by the Wolf Foundation in Israel.It is one of the six Wolf Prizes established by the Foundation and awarded since 1978; the others are in Agriculture, Chemistry, Mathematics, Medicine and Arts.The Wolf Prizes in physics and chemistry are often considered the second most prestigious awards in those fields, after the Nobel Prize.[1][2][3] The prize in physics has gained a reputation for identifying future winners of the Nobel Prize – from the 26 prizes awarded between 1978 and 2010, fourteen winners have gone on to win the Nobel Prize, five of those in the following year.Some laureates are counted more than once if they have multiple citizenships.
Wolf FoundationIsraelWolf PrizesAgricultureChemistryMathematicsMedicineChien-Shiung Wuweak interactionGeorge Eugene UhlenbeckS. A. GoudsmitGiuseppe Occhialinielectron pair productionMichael E. Fishertransitionsphases of matterLeo P. KadanoffKenneth G. WilsonFreeman Dysonquantum theory of fieldsGerard 't HooftVictor F. WeisskopfLeon M. LedermanquarksleptonsMartin Lewis PerlErwin Hahnspin echoesPeter B. Hirschtransmission electron microscopeTheodore H. Maimanruby laserConyers HerringPhilippe NozieresMitchell J. Feigenbaumnon-linear systemsAlbert J. LibchaberturbulenceHerbert FriedmanX-raysBruno B. Rossiextra-solar X-ray sourcesRiccardo GiacconiRoger Penrosetheory of general relativitycosmological singularitiesblack holesoriginfate of the UniverseStephen W. HawkingPierre-Gilles de Gennescondensed matter systemsliquid crystalsDavid J. ThoulessMaurice GoldhaberValentine L. TelegdiJoseph H. Taylor, Jr.radio pulsarBenoît MandelbrotfractalsVitaly L. GinzburgsuperconductivityYoichiro Nambuspontaneous symmetry breakingstrong interactionsJohn Archibald Wheelerquantum gravitynuclear fissionYakir AharonovAharonov–Bohm effectBerry phaseMichael V. BerryDan Shechtmanquasi-crystalsRaymond Davis, Jr.detection of neutrinosneutrino astronomyMasatoshi KoshibaBertrand I. Halperinmacroscopic quantum phenomenaAnthony J. LeggettRobert Broutlocal gauge symmetryFrançois EnglertPeter W. HiggsDaniel Kleppnerhydrogen maserRydberg atomsBose–Einstein condensationAlbert Fertgiant magnetoresistancespintronicselectronPeter GrünbergJohn F. Clausertests of Bell's inequalitiesentangled quantum statesAlain AspectAnton ZeilingerMaximilian Haideraberration-corrected electron microscopypicometermaterials scienceHarald RoseKnut UrbanJacob D. BekensteinPeter Zollerquantum informationquantum opticsIgnacio CiracJames D. Bjorkendeep inelastic scatteringstrong forceRobert P. Kirshnerthe acceleration in the expansion of the universeYoseph Imrymesoscopic physicsMichel Mayorextrasolar planeta starDidier QuelozCharles H. Bennettquantum information scienceGilles BrassardRafi BistritzerPablo Jarillo-HerreroAllan H. MacDonaldGiorgio ParisiAnne L'Huillierattosecond physicsPaul CorkumFerenc KrauszMartin ReesUnited StatesUnited KingdomFranceAustriaGermanyCanadaSwitzerlandHungaryNetherlandsBelgiumRepublic of ChinaRussiaSwedenList of physics awardsPhysics WorldBibcodeWayback MachineWolf Foundation PrizesGeorge UhlenbeckMichael FisherLeo KadanoffGerardus 't HooftVictor WeisskopfPeter HirschTheodore MaimanPhilippe NozièresMitchell FeigenbaumBruno RossiStephen HawkingValentine TelegdiJoseph H. Taylor Jr.Vitaly GinzburgJohn WheelerMichael BerryRaymond Davis Jr.Bertrand HalperinAnthony LeggettPeter HiggsJacob BekensteinJuan Ignacio Cirac