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File:PSM V73 D043 Rumford medal of the american academy of arts and sciences.png
Rumford Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Founded in 1796, the Rumford Prize, awarded by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, is one of the oldest scientific prizes in the United States. The prize recognizes contributions by scientists to the fields of heat and light. These terms are widely interpreted; awards range from discoveries in thermodynamics to improvements in the construction of steam boilers.

The award was created through the endowment of US$5,000 to the Academy by Benjamin Thompson, who held the title "Count Rumford of the United Kingdom," in 1796.<ref name="Academy Prizes">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The terms state that the award be given to "authors of discoverie's in any part of the Continent of America, or in any of the American islands." Although it was founded in 1796, the first prize was not given until 1839, as the academy could not find anyone who, in their judgement, deserved the award. The academy found the terms of the prize to be too restrictive, and in 1832 the Supreme Court of Massachusetts allowed the Academy to change some of the provisions; mainly, the award was to be given annually instead of biennially, and the Academy was allowed to award the prize as it saw fit, whereas before it had to give it yearly.<ref name="RS-1950">Template:Cite journal</ref> The first award was given to Robert Hare, for his invention of the oxy-hydrogen blowpipe, in 1839. Twenty-three years elapsed before the award was given a second time, to John Ericsson.<ref name="GBooks-Ericsson">Template:Cite book</ref>

The prize is awarded whenever the academy recognizes a significant achievement in either of the two fields. Awardees receive a gold-and-silver medal.<ref name="Academy Prizes" /> Previous prizewinners include Thomas Alva Edison, for his investigations in electric lighting; Enrico Fermi, for his studies of radiation theory and nuclear energy; and Charles H. Townes, for his development of the laser. One man, Samuel Pierpont Langley, has won both the Rumford Prize and the related Rumford Medal (the European equivalent of the Rumford Prize), both in 1886. The most recent award was given in 2021 to Charles L. Bennett for his contributions to cosmology. The prize has been given to researchers outside of the United States only twice—once to John Stanley Plaskett, from British Columbia, and once to a group of Canadian scientists "for their work in the field of long-baseline interferometry."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

List of recipientsEdit

File:PSM V42 D596 Robert Hare.jpg
Robert Hare, first recipient of the prize in 1839
File:1971 Rumford Prize won by Canadian Team.jpg
1971 Rumford Prize won by the Canadian Group
File:Sam Nunn.jpg
Sam Nunn, 2008 recipient

Source: American Academy of Arts and Sciences: Past Prizes

Year Name Location{{#if:[a]|[a]|[1]}} Rationale
1839 Template:Sortname Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Inventor of the oxy-hydrogen blowpipe
1862 Template:Sortname New York, New York His work improved the field of heat management, but the award was specifically for his invention of the caloric engine of 1858.
1865 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts Heat management. He was awarded especially for his contributions towards a "cannon of large caliber, and great strength and endurance".
1866 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts Improved refracting telescopes
1869 Template:Sortname Providence, Rhode Island For improving the steam engine
1871 Template:Sortname Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Towards his concern for safer steam boilers
1873 Template:Sortname New York, New York For improving the "processes and methods" of astronomical photography
1875 Template:Sortname New York, New York For his work towards apprehending radiant energy
1880 Template:Sortname New Haven, Connecticut Founded the field of chemical thermodynamics
1883 Template:Sortname Baltimore, Maryland For his research in light and heat
1886 Template:Sortname Allegheny, Philadelphia For his work towards the understanding of radiant energy
1888 Template:Sortname Cleveland, Ohio Measured the velocity of light, and contribution towards the motion of the luminiferous ether, and absolute determination of the wavelengths of light
1891 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For his work on stellar photometry and stellar spectra
1895 Template:Sortname Orange, New Jersey For his investigations in electric lighting
1898 Template:Sortname Allegheny, Pennsylvania For the applications of the spectroscope, and especially his investigations of nebulae and the physical contents of Saturn's rings
1899 Template:Sortname Cleveland, Ohio For the development of the electric arc lamp
1900 Template:Sortname Providence, Rhode Island For his heat research
1901 Template:Sortname Lynn, Massachusetts For his work in welding and lighting
1902 Template:Sortname Chicago, Illinois For his investigations in solar and stellar physics and for the invention of the spectro-heliograph
1904 Template:Sortname New York, New York For his research on radiation, radiation pressure, stellar heat, and the infrared spectrum
1907 Template:Sortname Niagara Falls, New York For the application of the electric furnace to the production of carborundum and graphite
1909 Template:Sortname Baltimore, Maryland For light-related discoveries, including the optical properties of sodium and other metallic vapors
1910 Template:Sortname New York, New York For his improvements to the steam turbine
1911 Template:Sortname Boston, Massachusetts For his work in thermometry, and the development of new fixed points on the scale.{{#if:[b]|[b]|[2]}}
1912 Template:Sortname Woodcliff-on-Hudson, New Jersey For his inventions in color photography and photoengraving
1913 Template:Sortname Urbana, Illinois For the development of the selenium photometer and its application to scientific problems
1914 Template:Sortname Schenectady, New York For his invention of ductile tungsten
1915 Template:Sortname Washington, D.C. For his research in solar radiation
1917 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For his high-pressure thermodynamic breakthroughs
1918 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts Awarded for his research on short-wave and long-wave wavelengths
1920 Template:Sortname Schenectady, New York "For his research in thermionic and allied phenomena"
1925 Template:Sortname Princeton, New Jersey Awarded for his research in solar radiation
1926 Template:Sortname Chicago, Illinois Awarded for his research in Roentgen rays
1928 Template:Sortname Ithaca, New York "For his research in spectrophotometry"
1930 Template:Sortname Victoria, British Columbia For his astronomical spectrographic research{{#if:[c]|[c]|[3]}}
1931 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts He was awarded the medal for thermionics and spectroscopic research.
1933 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For his work with the luminosity of stars and galaxies
1937 Template:Sortname Washington, D.C. For his improvements in the measurement of heat and light
1939 Template:Sortname Belmont, Massachusetts "For pioneering improvements in spectroscopics"
1941 Template:Sortname Princeton, New Jersey Awarded for the creation of the iconoscope and other related devices
1943 Template:Sortname Rochester, New York For his contributions to photography
1945 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For his inventions related to the application of polarized light
1947 Template:Sortname Princeton, New Jersey For his research in bioluminescence
1949 Template:Sortname Pasadena, California For his work on the identification of nebulium and for other outstanding works
1951 Template:Sortname Montclair, New Jersey For his research in the field of optics
1953 Template:Sortname Chicago, Illinois For his investigations in electromagnetic radiation and nuclear energy
1953 Template:Sortname Stanford, California Awarded for studying the hydrogen spectrum
1953 Template:Sortname New Haven, Connecticut For his investigations in thermodynamics related to transportation
1955 Template:Sortname Chicago, Illinois For his studies in the investigation of photosynthesis
1957 Template:Sortname Williams Bay, Wisconsin For his investigations of the radiative energy balance in stars
1959 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For identifying the biochemical basis of vision
1961 Template:Sortname New York, New York "For his development of the laser"
1963 Template:Sortname Ithaca, New York For pioneering studies in stellar nucleosynthesis
1965 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For the invention of the Collins Helium Cryostat and other pioneering work
1965 Template:Sortname Baltimore, Maryland For his work on the molecular origin of bioluminescence
1967 Template:Sortname Princeton, New Jersey "For his contributions to microwave radiometry and to the understanding of atomic structure"
1967 Template:Sortname Stanford, California For his contributions to the study of photosynthesis
1968 Template:Sortname Pasadena, California For his work deducing the spectra of quasi-stellar objects
1971 MIT Group (John. A Ball, Alan H. Barrett, Bernard F. Burke, Joseph C. Carter, Patricia P. Crowther, James M. Moran Jr., Alan E. E. Rogers)

Canadian Group (Norman W. Broten, R. M. Chisholm, John A. Galt, Herbert P. Gush, Thomas H. Legg, Jack L. Locke, Charles W. McLeish, Roger S. Richards, Jui Lin Yen)


NRAO–Cornell Group (Claude C. Bare, Barry G. Clark, Marshall H. Cohen, David L. Jauncey, Kenneth I. Kellermann)

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Ball, Barrett, Burke, Carter, Crowther, Moran, Rogers)

National Research Council (Canada) (Broten, Legg, Locke, McLeish, Richards); Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory (Galt); University of Toronto (Yen); Queen's University (Chisolm); University of British Columbia (Gush)<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

National Radio Astronomy Observatory (Bare, Clark, Kellerman); Cornell University (Cohen, Jauncey)<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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"For their work in the field of long-baseline interferometry." The Rumford Committee sponsored a symposium on recent developments in the field to mark the unusual circumstances of the 1971 award;<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> it was reported in the January 14, 1972 issue of Science.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
1973 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For pioneering the importance of symmetry in polyatomic molecules and for his active work in the field of microwave spectroscopy
1976 Template:Sortname Cambridge, Massachusetts For discovering the origins of cosmic radiation
1980 Template:Sortname Urbana, Illinois For researching the theory of, and working on the application of, fluorescence
1980 Template:Sortname

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Stony Brook, New York

Columbus, Ohio

"For development of a generalized gauge invariant field theory"
1985 Template:Sortname

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Seattle, Washington

Cambridge, Massachusetts


New Haven, Connecticut


Cambridge, Massachusetts

Awarded for his work in the field of atomic spectroscopy
1986 Template:Sortname

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Pasadena, California

Tucson, Arizona


Pasadena, California

For his work in developing infrared astronomy
1992 Template:Sortname

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Chicago, Illinois

Chicago, Illinois


San Diego, California

Awarded for working towards the understanding of photosynthesis
1996 Template:Sortname Greenbelt, Maryland For his research related to the cosmic microwave background
2008 Template:Sortname

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Stanford University

Nuclear Threat Initiative{{#if:[d]|[d]|[4]}}


Stanford University


Stanford University

For their efforts to reduce the global threat of nuclear weapons<ref name="Rumford-2008">Template:Cite press release</ref>
2015 Template:Sortname

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Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

Alcatel-Lucent Bell Laboratory

For their contributions to the field of laser technology
2019 Template:Sortname
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Max-Planck Institute of Biophysics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Stanford University
Humboldt University of Berlin
University of Oxford
University of Würzburg
For "their extraordinary contributions related to the invention and refinement of optogenetics."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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2021 Template:Sortname Baltimore, Maryland For his contributions to the field of cosmology

See alsoEdit

References and notesEdit

  • [a] <templatestyles src="Citation/styles.css"/>^{{#if:| }} In this sense, location refers to the recipient's place of work or association


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