Tomasz Dietl

Tomasz Dietl (born 1 October 1950) is a Polish physicist, a professor and a head of Laboratory for Cryogenic and Spintronic Research at the Institute of Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences and professor of The Institute of Theoretical Physics at University of Warsaw.[1] His research interest includes semiconductors, spintronics and nanotechnology.[2] With over 20,000 citations he is considered one of the leading Polish physicists.[3]

Tomasz Dietl
Born1 October 1950 (1950-10) (age 69)
CitizenshipPolish
Alma materUniversity of Warsaw
AwardsAlexander von Humboldt Research Award (2003)
Europhysics Prize (2006)
Marian Smoluchowski Medal (2010)
Scientific career
FieldsSpintronics
InstitutionsPolish Academy of Sciences

Career

He graduated from the University of Warsaw at the age of 23 (master's degree) and subsequently obtained his PhD from the Polish Academy of Sciences in 1977. He obtained a habilitation in 1983 and the title of professor in 1990.[4] Since then he has been working in the Institute of Physics of the Polish Academy of Sciences. In 2009, he became a member of the Polish Academy of Learning (PAU) as well as the Warsaw Scientific Society (WTN).[5] He worked as a visiting professor at the Johannes Kepler University Linz (1991-92, 1996-98), Joseph Fourier University (1993-2000) and Tohoku University.[6]

In 2006, he received Poland's top science award, Prize of the Foundation for Polish Science, "for developing the theory, confirmed in recent years, of diluted ferromagnetic semiconductors, and for demonstrating new methods in controlling magnetization."[7]

Personal life

He is the son of economist Jerzy Dietl. He is married and has two children.

Honours and awards

Most influential publications

  1. Dietl T., Ohno H., Matsukura F., Cibert J., Ferrand D., Zener Model Description of Ferromagnetism in Zinc-Blende Magnetic Semiconductors, Science (2000)

See also

  • Science in Poland

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.