• 1962
Abdus Salam • 1964
Walter Charles Marshall • 1966
Richard Henry Dalitz • 1968
Roger James Elliott and Kenneth William Harry Stevens • 1970
Richard John Eden • 1971
John Bryan Taylor • 1972
Volker Heine • 1973
David James Thouless • 1974
Samuel Frederick Edwards • 1975
Anthony James Leggett • 1976
Stephen William Hawking • 1977
Eric Jakeman • 1978
Michael Victor Berry • 1979
Christopher Hubert Llewellyn Smith • 1980
David James Wallace • 1981
John Michael Kosterlitz • 1982
Jonathan Richard Ellis • 1983
Alastair Douglas Bruce • 1984
David William Bullett • 1985 Alan John Bray and
Allan Peter Young • 1986
James Binney • 1987
Michael Boris Green • 1988 Robin C Ball • 1989 Mark Warner • 1990
George Petros Efstathiou • 1991
Michael E Cates • 1992
Neil Turok • 1993
John Feather Wheater • 1994
Stephen Mark Barnett • 1995
Artur Konrad Ekert • 1996
Michael Christopher Payne • 1997 Michael Wilkinson • 1998
Andrew James Fisher • 1999
Jeffrey Robert Forshaw • 2000
Andrew Martin Steane • 2001
Benjamin Simons • 2002
Andrew John Schofield • 2003
Tchavdar Nikolov Todorov • 2004
Martin Bodo Plenio • 2005
Clifford Victor Johnson, "For his outstanding contribution to string theory, quantum gravity and its interface with strongly coupled field theory; in particular for his work on understanding the censorship of singularities, and the thermodynamic properties, of quantum spacetime." • 2006
Ruth Gregory, "For her contributions to physics at the interface of general relativity and string theory, in particular for her work on the physics of cosmic strings and black holes." • 2007
Nigel Cooper, "For his work on topological excitations in quantum Hall fluids and related systems, in particular rotating Bose-Einstein condensates." • 2008
Sougato Bose, "For his work on the characterisation and exploitation of entanglement in quantum systems, in particular for his work on the propagation of information in spin chains." • 2009
Dmitry Skryabin, "For his contributions to theory and modelling of nonlinear optical processes; in particular for predictions and understanding of effects accompanying interaction of solitons with radiation and generation of ultrabroad spectra in optical fibers." • 2010 Peter Haynes, "For his work on linear-scaling methods for large-scale first-principles simulation of materials based on density-functional theory, in particular his leading role in the development of the ONETEP code used in both academe and industry." • 2011
Andrei Starinets, "For his contributions to our understanding of the transport properties of systems of strongly coupled quantum fields." • 2012
Meera Parish, "For her pioneering work in the theory of cold fermionic matter and magnetotransport in highly disordered media." • 2013
Joanna Dunkley, "For her contributions to determining the structure and history of our Universe." • 2014
Igor Lesanovsky, "For his outstanding contributions to the theory of control and manipulation of quantum systems, particularly his pioneering studies of highly excited 'Rydberg' states in cold atomic gases." • 2015
Clare Burrage, "For her contributions to dark energy research, in particular to the development of methods of testing for fifth forces from astrophysical probes through to atom interferometry experiments." • 2016
Alexandra Olaya-Castro, "For her contributions to the theory of quantum effects in biomolecular systems – in particular, to the understanding of exciton-vibration interactions and the emergence of nontrivial quantum behaviour in photosynthetic complexes." • 2017
Marcin Mucha-Kruczynski, "For outstanding contributions to the understanding of graphene, in particular groundbreaking studies that have addressed its optical properties, lattice deformations, electronic structure, and electron transport." • 2018
Hannah Price, "For her important contributions to the nascent fields of topological atomic and optical physics, including collaboration with world-leading experimental groups in their observation of new effects." • 2019
Adam Nahum, "For his outstanding contributions to understanding universal aspects of many-body quantum systems both in and out of equilibrium." • 2020
Curt von Keyserlingk, "For remarkable discoveries in non-equilibrium physics, including the discovery of new families of driven phases of matter, and revealing the unexpected manner in which information spreads in quantum many-body systems." • 2021
Bartomeu Monserrat, "For exceptional contributions to the development of computational techniques that bring temperature to modern electronic structure methods, and their application to topological materials, photovoltaics, superconductors and planetary physics." • 2022
Katy Clough, "For pioneering the use of advanced computational methods to investigate fundamental physics, achieving groundbreaking research in inflationary cosmology and dark matter, and demonstrating outstanding leadership in computational physics." • 2023
Nikolas Breuckmann, "For outstanding contributions to the quantum error correction field, particularly work on proving the no low-energy trivial state conjecture, a famous open problem in quantum information theory." • 2024 Frank Schindler, "For numerous conceptual contributions to condensed matter physics; in particular, the prediction of higher-order topological insulators, novel quantum materials whose lossless edge states promise energy-efficient microelectronics in the post-silicon age." == References ==