Fumiko Yonezawa
Fumiko Yonezawa (米沢 富美子; born 1938) is a Japanese theoretical physicist. She researched semi-conductors and liquid metals.
Yonezawa graduated from Kyoto University. She worked with a group of scientists at Keio University, simulating amorphous structures using computers and then creating visualizations of them.[1]
She was made President of the Physics Society of Japan in 1996, the first woman to hold the position.[2] in 1984 she was awarded the Saruhashi Prize, and in 2005 a L'Oréal-UNESCO Award for Women in Science for "pioneering theory and computer simulations on amorphous semiconductors and liquid metals."
Selected publications
- Yonezawa, Fumiko; Morigaki, Kazuo (1973). "Coherent Potential Approximation". Progress of Theoretical Physics Supplement. 53: 1–76. doi:10.1143/PTPS.53.1.
- Nosé, Shuichi; Yonezawa, Fumiko (1986). "Isothermal–isobaric computer simulations of melting and crystallization of a Lennard-Jones system". The Journal of Chemical Physics. 84 (3): 1803. doi:10.1063/1.450427.
- Yonezawa, F. (1 October 1968). "A Systematic Approach to the Problems of Random Lattices. I: A Self-Contained First-Order Approximation Taking into Account the Exclusion Effect". Progress of Theoretical Physics. 40 (4): 734–757. doi:10.1143/PTP.40.734.
- Yonezawa, Fumiko; Matsubara, Takeo (March 1966). "Note on Electronic State of Random Lattice. II". Progress of Theoretical Physics. 35 (3): 357–379. doi:10.1143/PTP.35.357.
References
- ↑ Kodate, Naonori; Kodate, Kashiko (2015). Japanese Women in Science and Engineering: History and Policy Change. Routledge. p. 98. ISBN 1-317-59505-X.
- ↑ Kameda, Atseko (2011). Fujimura-Fanselow, Kumiko, ed. Transforming Japan: How Feminism and Diversity Are Making a Difference. New York: Feminist Press at CUNY. ISBN 1-55861-700-0.
Further reading
- Kozai, Yoshihide (2001). My Life: Twenty Japanese Women Scientists. Uchida Rokakuho. pp. 43–.
External links
- Prof. Fumiko Yonezawa, 2005 For Women In Science Laureate for Asia/Pacific (Japan), L’Oréal Foundation
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