2014 fellows of the American Physical Society were announced recently.
Here a count from DOE labs...
LLNL - 10
LBNL - 9
LANL - 9
Argonne - 5
Brookhaven - 3
Fermi - 3
PNNL - 3
Jeff Lab - 2
ORNL - 2
SLAC - 1
SNL - 1
Here a count from DOE labs...
LLNL - 10
LBNL - 9
LANL - 9
Argonne - 5
Brookhaven - 3
Fermi - 3
PNNL - 3
Jeff Lab - 2
ORNL - 2
SLAC - 1
SNL - 1
9 comments:
Yea I mentioned this last year and they worked on it this year. Check last year as it tells a different story.
Fellowships for the labs are 100% politics, which vary from year to year. This was a good year for LLNL, others were not so good.
"Fellowships for the labs are 100% politics, "
Everything is political so what is your point?
To make your veins bulge, angry man.
I startling fact is that Sandia National Laboratories just received one 2014 fellows. I know, I know SNL is the Engineering Lab. Oh, BS I worked there, they are a Physics Lab "wanna be".
Their time will come. Probably next year, after a certain someone complains that SNL is under-represented.
Sandia came in last probably because three Vice Presidents of technical divisions at Sandia National Laboratories do not have a Ph.D.: Hruby, Walker, Vahle. To my knowledge, these are the first ever Vice Presidents without a Ph.D. in Science or Engineering to lead techical divisions at Sandia.
Adam Rowen (manager of the Materials Chemistry department) from Sandia National Laboratories does not have a Ph.D.
Irrelevant to anything except your twisted obsession.
APS fellowships are based on what happened 10-20 years ago.
Yeah, LLNL was winning 20 years ago. Not anymore.
Expect that list to turn upside down over the next 10-20 years.
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