• 2024
Matteucci Medal of
Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze, Rome, Italy. She is the fourth woman to receive this award since it was established in 1868, following
Marie Curie,
Irène Joliot-Curie, and
Jocelyn Bell Burnell. • 2023
Harvey Prize of
Technion -- Israel Institute of Technology. • 2023 an honoree by the
Carnegie Corporation of New York's
Great Immigrant Award. • 2021 David M. Lee Historical Lecture in Physics,
Harvard University: "A window on particle physics at Harvard in the early 1970's". • 2019 J. Robert Oppenheimer Lecture,
University of California, Berkeley: "Teaching for Learning: What I have learned from learning research". A video of this lecture is available. • 2018 Honorary Degree, Doctor of Science, from the
Australian National University, for her "exceptional contributions to theoretical physics and science education." She was a keynote speaker at graduation. • 2018 Awarded the 2018
Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics of the
Franklin Institute, "for her pioneering contributions to the long-term quest for a unified theory of the strong, weak, and electromagnetic interactions of fundamental particles." • 2017 Selected to give the annual Dirac Lecture at Cambridge University, sponsored jointly by St John's College and the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics of the University of Cambridge. Her topic: "Antimatter: Dirac's incredible prediction and its consequences." She was the first woman scientist to be selected since the lecture series was begun in 1986. • 2017 Inducted to the "Avenue of Excellence" at
Tintern Grammar, in the first class of inductees. The "Avenue of Excellence" on the Tintern campus honors Tintern graduates, and aims to inspire current and future students to pursue excellence. • 2016
Karl Taylor Compton Medal for Leadership in Physics from the
American Institute of Physics "for her leadership in promoting K-12 education and outreach, including the development of standards and approaches to science education that have had an enormous influence at the local, state, national and international levels, and for her broad and deep contributions to the advancement of theoretical particle physics." • 2016 Member of the
American Philosophical Society • 2013
J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics from the
American Physical Society (With Roberto Peccei): "For their proposal of the elegant mechanism to resolve the famous problem of strong-CP violation which, in turn, led to the invention of axions, a subject of intense experimental and theoretical investigation for more than three decades." • 2008
Oskar Klein Medal from the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. She was the first woman to receive this award. • 2005 appointed an Honorary Officer of the
Order of Australia, "for service to scientific research in the field of theoretical physics and to education" (the award was honorary because Quinn was no longer an Australian citizen) • 2005 Honorary Degree, Doctor of Science, from the
University of Melbourne • 2005 Karl F. Herzfeld Memorial Lecture,
Catholic University of America: "The Asymmetry Between Matter and Antimatter in the Universe and in the Laws of Physics". • 2004 President,
American Physical Society • 2002 Honorary Degree, Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, from
University of Notre Dame • 2000
Dirac Medal of the International Center for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy (with
Howard Georgi and
Jogesh Pati) "for pioneering contributions to the quest for a unified theory of quarks and leptons and of the strong, weak, and electromagnetic interactions". She was the first woman to receive this award. • 1998 Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences • 1974
Sloan Research Fellowship ==Selected publications==