Site icon Improbable Research

Ig Nobel frog-levitation winner wins Europhysics prize

Graphene pioneers bag Europhysics prize

Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov of the University of Manchester in the UK have been awarded this year’s Europhysics Prize for “discovering and isolating a single free-standing atomic layer of carbon (graphene) and elucidating its remarkable electronic properties”. The annual award is given by the European Physical SocietyÂ’s condensed-matter division and the pair will share €10,000 in prize money.

The two researchers discovered graphene in 2004 by using a piece of adhesive tape to peel a single atomic layer off a piece of graphite — a process known as micromechanical cleavage or the “Scotch tape method”….

Geim is also famous for his 1997 “flying frog” experiment in which he and his colleagues in Nijmegen levitated a frog using a powerful magnet. He shared the 2000 “IgNobel” prize for his efforts.

So reports PhysicsWorld on September 2, 2008

Exit mobile version