The Dennis Gabor Medal and Prize (previously the Duddell Medal and Prize until 2008) is a prize awarded biannually by the Institute of Physics for distinguished contributions to the application of physics in an industrial, commercial or business context. The medal is made of silver and is accompanied by a prize and a certificate.[1]
The original Duddell award was instituted by the Council of The Physical Society in 1923 to the memory of William du Bois Duddell, the inventor of the electromagneticoscillograph. Between 1961 and 1975 it was awarded in alternate odd-numbered years and thereafter annually.[2]
In 2008 the award was renamed in honour of Dennis Gabor, the Hungarian – British physicist who developed holography, for which he received the 1971 Nobel Prize in Physics. The prize also switched to being awarded in alternate even-numbered years.
Gabor Medallists
The following have been awarded the Gabor Medal and Prize:[3]
^"Response by Dr. William D. Coolidge in Accepting the Duddell Medal at the Meeting of the American Physical Society, May 1, 1942". Journal of Applied Physics. 13 (8): 478–480. August 1, 1942. Bibcode:1942JAP....13..478.. doi:10.1063/1.1714898.
^"The Physical Society Award of the Duddell Medal". The British Journal of Radiology. 10 (117): 676. September 1, 1937. doi:10.1259/0007-1285-10-117-676-b.