The Thomas Ranken Lyle Medal is awarded at most every two years by the Australian Academy of Science to a mathematician or physicist for his or her outstanding research accomplishments.[1] It is named after Thomas Ranken Lyle, an Irish mathematical physicist who became a professor at the University of Melbourne. The award takes the form of a bronze medal[2] bearing the design of the head of Thomas Lyle, as sculpted by Rayner Hoff.[3]
The medal was founded by the Australian National Research Council (ANRC) in 1932,[2][4] and first awarded in 1935.[1][3] When the Australian Academy of Science was established in 1954, it took over the roles of the ANRC, including administration of the medal.
Year | Recipients[1] | Contribution |
---|---|---|
1935 | John Raymond Wilton [3] | |
1941 | G.H. Briggs[5] | |
1941 | Thomas Gerald Room[5][6] | |
1947 | John Conrad Jaeger[7] | |
1947 | David Forbes Martyn[7] | atmospheric tides[8] |
1949 | Keith Edward Bullen | |
1951 | Thomas MacFarland Cherry | |
1953 | Joseph Lade Pawsey[9] | |
1957 | B.Y. Mills | |
1959 | Eric Barnes[10] | |
1961 | H.O. Lancaster | |
1963 | Graeme Reade Anthony Ellis[11] | |
1963 | Patrick A. P. Moran[11] | |
1966 | Stuart Thomas Butler | nuclear reaction theory, plasma physics, and atmospheric tides[12] |
1968 | George Szekeres | "a wide range of mathematical disciplines" including fractional iteration of functions, numerical integration, graph theory, and relativistic kinematics[13] |
1970 | Robert Hanbury Brown | |
1972 | H.A. Buchdahl | |
1975 | John Paul Wild | radio astronomy of the sun[14] |
1977 | Kurt Mahler | number theory[15] |
1979 | Edward J. Hannan | statistics of stationary processes[16] |
1981 | J.R. Philip | |
1981 | D.W. Robinson | |
1983 | Rodney J. Baxter | |
1985 | A.W. Snyder | |
1987 | D.B. Melrose | |
1989 | R. Delbourgo | |
1989 | Peter Gavin Hall | |
1991 | B.H.J. McKellar | |
1993 | Neville Horner Fletcher | |
1993 | Erich Weigold | |
1995 | Chris Heyde | martingale limit theory[17] |
1997 | Anthony W. Thomas | quarks and nucleon structure[18] |
1999 | Ernie Tuck | |
2001 | Ian Sloan | |
2003 | George Dracoulis | nuclear structure[19] |
2005 | Anthony J. Guttmann[20] | |
2007 | Yuri Kivshar | nonlinear optics[21] |
2009 | Victor V. Flambaum | unified field theory, parity violations, fundamental constants[22] |
2011 | James Stanislaus Williams | [23] |