Rank Prizes
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The Rank Prizes comprise the Rank Prize for Optoelectronics and the Rank Prize for Nutrition. The prizes recognise, reward and encourage researchers working in the respective fields of optoelectronics and nutrition.{{cite journal|journal=MRS Bulletin|volume=33|issue=11|first=Carol|last=Traeger-Cowan|date=November 2008 | pages=999–1000|title=The Rank Prize Funds: Nurturing Advancement in Optoelectronics|doi=10.1557/mrs2008.219|quote=Published online... 31 January 2011|doi-access=free}} [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/4AF5DA76A06B63E9CAB25C09A85C84C4/S088376940000631Xa.pdf/the-rank-prize-funds-nurturing-advancement-in-optoelectronics.pdf PDF]
The prizes are funded by the charity The Rank Prize Funds, which were endowed by the industrialist, philanthropist and founder of the Rank Organisation, J. Arthur Rank and his wife Nell, via the Rank Foundation on 16 February 1972, not long before Arthur's death. The two Funds, the Human and Animal Nutrition and Crop Husbandry Fund and the Optoelectronics Fund, support sciences which reflect Rank's business interests through his "connection with the flour-milling and cinema and electronics industries", and which Rank believed would be of great benefit to humanity. The Rank Prize Funds also recognise, support and foster excellence among young and emerging researchers in the two fields of nutrition and optoelectronics. The Funds aim to advance and promote education and learning for public benefit.{{cite web | title=Rank Prize Funds | url=http://www.opto.org.uk/index.php?module=static&id=65 | access-date=11 July 2020}}
Rank Prize for Optoelectronics
The Rank Prize for Optoelectronics supports, encourages, and rewards researchers working at the cutting edge of optoelectronics research, initially (from 1976) awarded annually, now a biennial prize worth £100,000.{{cite web | title=Past Prizes in Optoelectronics | website=The Rank Prize Funds | url=http://www.rankprize.org/index.php/prizes/optoelectronics | access-date=11 July 2020}} Optoelectronics relates to the interface between optics and electronics, and related phenomena.
The Committee on Optoelectronics consists of the following people:{{cite web | title=Optoelectronics Committee | website=Home | url=http://www.rankprize.org/index.php/administration/optoelectronics | access-date=11 July 2020}}
- Donal Bradley CBE FRS (Chairman)
- Roberto Cipolla FREng{{cite web | title=Roberto Cipolla | website=University of Cambridge. Department of Engineering | date=28 November 2013 | url=http://www.eng.cam.ac.uk/profiles/rc10001 | access-date=11 July 2020}}
- Martin D. Dawson FRSE
- Helen Gleeson OBE
- Anya Hurlbert
- Simon Laughlin FRS, neurobiologist{{cite web | title=Simon Laughlin | website=Royal Society | date=19 September 2015 | url=https://royalsociety.org/people/simon-laughlin-11790/ | access-date=11 July 2020}}
- John Mollon DSc FRS
- Miles Padgett FRSE FRS
- Wilson Sibbett CBE FRS FRSE
- Maurice Skolnick FRS{{cite web | title=Maurice Skolnick | website=Royal Society | date=19 September 2015 | url=https://royalsociety.org/people/maurice-skolnick-12291/ | access-date=11 July 2020}}
- 1978 – Charles K. Kao
- 1980 – George Gray
- 1982 – C. Thomas Elliott and Calvin Quate
- 1988 – T. Peter Brody
- 1991 – David N. Payne and William Alexander Gambling
- 1992 – William Newsome and Semir Zeki
- 1993 – Horace W. Babcock and Arthur Ashkin
- 1995 – William Bradshaw Amos, Marvin Minsky and Chuck Hull
- 1997 – Peter Mansfield
- 1998 – Federico Capasso, Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura
- 2000 – Winfried Denk and Watt W. Webb
- 2006
- Charles H. Bennett, Gilles Brassard and Stephen Wiesner (for research on the original concept of quantum cryptography){{Cite web |title=Optoelectronics Winners Archive |url=https://www.rankprize.org/prize/optoelectronics/winners/ |access-date=2023-08-13 |website=Rank Prize |language=en-GB}}
- Paul Alivisatos, M.P. Bruchez, W.C.W. Chan, S.M. Nie, S. Weiss (for realisation of quantum dot nanocrystals as biological labels)
- 2008 – Mandyam Srinivasan and Peter B. Denyer
- 2014 – Alf Adams and Eli Yablonovitch
- 2018 – Jonathan C. Knight, Philip Russell and Tim Birks{{cite web | title=Tim Birks | website= University of Bath's research portal | url=https://researchportal.bath.ac.uk/en/persons/tim-birks | access-date=11 July 2020}}{{cite web | website=IEEE Xplore | date=16 June 2020 | url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/author/37265700000|title=T.A. Birks | access-date=11 July 2020}}
- 2022 − Michael Graetzel and Nam-Gyu Park
Rank Prize for Nutrition
The Rank Prize for Nutrition is for research in human and animal nutrition (distinct from animal husbandry), and crop husbandry.
The Committee on Nutrition consists of the following people:
- John Mathers PhD Hon FAfN (Chairman)
- Malcolm Bennett
- Michael Gooding
- Peter Gregory FRASE
- Sarah Gurr
- Anne-Marie Minihane
- Susan Ozanne
- Ann Prentice OBE PHD
- John Wilding
The Rank Prize for Nutrition was awarded at various intervals since 1976, but is now also awarded biennially, worth £100,000.{{cite web | title=Past Prizes in Nutrition | website=The Rank Prize Funds | url=http://www.rankprize.org/index.php/prizes/nutrition | access-date=11 July 2020}}
In 2014 Australian biophysicist Graham Farquhar and the CSIRO agronomist Richard Richards were awarded the Rank Prize in Nutrition, for "pioneering the understanding of isotope discrimination in plants and its application to breed wheat varieties that use water more efficiently", which related to a discovery the pair made in the 1980s.{{cite web | title=Rank Prize | website=ANU Research School of Biology | url=https://biology.anu.edu.au/about/awards/rank-prize | language=en | access-date=11 July 2020}}{{cite web | title=Richard Richards | website=The Conversation | date=1 July 2015 | url=https://theconversation.com/profiles/richard-richards-3526 | access-date=11 July 2020}}{{cite web | title=Luminaries: Richard Richards | website=Plantae | date=7 February 2017 | url=https://plantae.org/richard-richards/ | access-date=11 July 2020}}{{cite web | title=Richard Richards | website=Australian Academy of Science | url=https://www.science.org.au/profile/richard-richards | access-date=11 July 2020}}
- 1981 − Hugo Kortschak, Marshall (Hal) Davidson Hatch and Roger Slack, for "outstanding work on the mechanism of photosynthesis which established the existence of an alternative pathway for the initial fixation of carbon dioxide in some important food plants".
- 1982 − Hamish Munro, for his work on the protein metabolism of mammals.
- 1984 − Elsie Widdowson, for her work on the values of foods as nutrient sources, the effects of long-term undernutrition and starvation and the nature and control of the growth process.
- 1989 − Vernon R. Young, for his work on the amino acid metabolism of man.
- 1992 − Kenneth Blaxter, lifetime award given posthumously.
- 1995 – Richard Smithells and B.M. Hibbard, for "pioneering studies into the role of micronutrient deficiencies, principally folic acid deficiency, and neural tube defects".
- 2006 − J.C. van Lenteren, Marcel Dicke, and Louise E.M. Vet for "fundamental studies of plant-pest-natural enemy interactions and the development of practical methods of pest control".{{Cite web |title=Nutrition Winners Archive |url=https://www.rankprize.org/prize/nutrition/winners/ |access-date=2023-08-13 |website=Rank Prize |language=en-GB}}
- 2010 − Peter E. Hartmann{{cite web | title=Peter Hartmann | website=University of Western Australia | url=https://research-repository.uwa.edu.au/en/persons/peter-hartmann | access-date=11 July 2020}} and Robyn Owens for their "research on human lactation, including methods for the non-invasive measurement of the rate of milk secretion".
- 2020 – Stephen O'Rahilly
- 2022 – Cathie Martin "for outstanding research into plant genetics and metabolism leading to enhanced nutritional qualities of fruits and vegetables".