Moshe Shapiro
Israeli scientist
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Moshe Shapiro (Hebrew: משה שפירו; October 1944 – 3 December 2013) was a chemist and physicist at the University of British Columbia.
BornOctober 1944
Died3 December 2013 (aged 69)
KnownforContributions in the field of coherent control
Awards
- Willis Lamb Award in Quantum Optics (2007)
- Fellow American Physical Society (2004)
- Fellow UK Institute of Physics (2004)
- Israel Chemical Society Award (2001)
- Michael Landau Award (1999)
- Weizmann Prize of the city of Tel Aviv (1999)
- Kolthoff Prize of the Technion (1998)
- Somekh Zacks and Yeroslawsky awards of the Weizmann Institute
Moshe Shapiro | |
|---|---|
משה שפירו | |
| Born | October 1944 |
| Died | 3 December 2013 (aged 69) |
| Known for | Contributions in the field of coherent control |
| Awards |
|
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Chemical physics |
| Institutions | University of British Columbia |
Research
Shapiro's research focused on coherent control, laser catalysis, quantum computing, transition state spectroscopy, quantum mechanics, and other areas.[1]
Awards and achievements
Shapiro published more than 300 papers, and the book Principles of the Quantum Control of Molecular Processes with P. Brumer. He won a variety of prizes for his research.[1]
He was the Canada Research Chair Professor in Quantum Control. From 1993 to 2002, he was the Jacques Mimran Professor of Chemical Physics at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel.[1]