Rössler Prize
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Awarded forOutstanding scientific work
Sponsored byETH Zurich Foundation
LocationZürich
CountrySwitzerland
| Rössler Prize | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | Outstanding scientific work |
| Sponsored by | ETH Zurich Foundation |
| Location | Zürich |
| Country | Switzerland |
| First award | 2009 |
| Website | https://www.ethz-foundation.ch/en/roessler-prize/ |
The Rössler Prize, offered by the ETH Zurich Foundation, is a monetary prize that has been awarded annually since 2009 to a promising young tenured professor of the ETH Zurich in the middle of an accelerating career.[1] The prize of 200,000 Swiss Francs is financed by the returns from an endowment made by Max Rössler, an alumnus of the ETH.[2] The prize money has to be used for the research of the laureate.[3]
- 2009: Nenad Ban, Microbiology[4]
- 2010: Gerald Haug, Geology of Climate
- 2011: Andreas Wallraff, Solid State Physics
- 2012: Nicola Spaldin, Material Science[5]
- 2013: Olivier Voinnet, RNA Biology[6]
- 2014: Christian Wolfrum, Health Sciences and Technology[7]
- 2015: David J. Norris, Mechanical and Process Engineering[8]
- 2016: Christophe Copéret, Chemistry and Applied Biosciences
- 2017: Olga Sorkine-Hornung, Computer Science[9]
- 2018: Philippe Block, Architecture[10]
- 2019: Maksym Kovalenko, Inorganic chemistry/Nanotechnology[11][8]
- 2020: Paola Picotti, Biology[12]
- 2021: Andreas Krause (computer scientist), Machine Learning
- 2022: Tanja Stadler, Mathematics and Computational evolutionary biology[13]
- 2023: Siddhartha Mishra, Mathematics
- 2024: Marco Hutter, Robotics[14]
- 2025: Florian Dörfler, Control engineering[15]