OSA Fellow
The OSA Fellow,[1] the Optical Society of America, is a membership designation[2] that denotes distinguished scientific accomplishment. The bylaws of this society only allow 10% of its membership to be designated as an OSA Fellow. The OSA Fellow requires peer group nomination.
The nominee
An OSA member can only become an OSA Fellow when nominated by a peer group of other current, OSA Fellows. Review of the nomination is then passed to the OSA Fellow Members Committee. This committee then nominates the candidate to the Board of Directors on an annual basis. Finally, the purpose of this award is to designate a member as one who has "made significant contributions to the advancement of optics".[3]
The process
The process includes actively identifying possible candidates who might qualify for this award. Contributing factors for qualification are diverse within the optics community. These factors include significant or distinguishing scientific accomplishments, technical achievements, inventions, technical innovations, technical management, and demonstration of leadership. The fields of such achievement are significant instrument technique, and measurement technique (including original software). Other fields include distinguished sustained accomplishments in engineering, education, service to the global optics community (including photonics and the OSA). Other factors may also include a record of significant publications, patents, and invited review papers for the various levels of meetings related to the covered fields.
Letters of recommendation are solicited from outside the nominee's field of work. Finally references from at least three and no more than five people familiar with the nominee's work are required.[3] Once all the relevant information has been considered, the OSA Fellow Members Committee votes on the applications and those selected are forwarded to the Board of Directors.
OSA Fellows featured in Wikipedia
- Richard L. Abrams
- Robert Alfano
- Arthur Ashkin
- Thomas M. Baer
- Jean M. Bennett
- Robert W. Boyd
- William B. Bridges
- Robert L. Byer
- H. John Caulfield
- Steven Chu
- Claude Cohen-Tannoudji
- Anthony J. DeMaria
- Christopher Dainty
- F. J. Duarte
- Joseph H. Eberly
- Okan K. Ersoy
- Michael S. Feld
- Joseph W. Goodman
- James P. Gordon
- John L. Hall
- Theodor W. Hänsch
- S. E. Harris
- Susan Houde-Walter
- John Howard (optical physicist)
- Herbert E. Ives
- Anthony M. Johnson
- Willis E. Lamb
- Melvin Lax
- Theodore Maiman
- Leonard Mandel
- John C. Mather
- Lorenzo M. Narducci
- Perley G. Nutting
- B. J. Orr
- James A. Piper
- William Daniel Phillips
- Monika Ritsch-Marte
- Philip Russell
- Arthur Leonard Schawlow
- Marlan Scully
- Francis Sears
- Vladimir Shalaev
- Anthony E. Siegman
- William T. Silfvast
- Warren J. Smith
- Peter P. Sorokin
- Costas Soukoulis
- Boris P. Stoicheff
- John D. Strong
- Charles Hard Townes
- Victor Twersky
- Daniel Frank Walls
- Colin Webb
- Carl Wieman
- David J. Wineland
- Emil Wolf
- Eli Yablonovitch
References
- ↑ List of the Fellow Members of the Optical Society of America
- ↑ List of society membership categories in the OSA:
- 1 2 "Fellow Membership". Optical Society of America. 2010. Retrieved February 6, 2011.