APS Fellowship

The Division is able to elect each year one-half of one percent of the current membership. Nominations may be made at any time, but only those received by the deadline will be considered for action in that year.

Gray arrow DCMP Deadline for APS Fellowship Nomination: Monday, April 1, 2024
Gray arrow APS Fellowship Information

APS Fellows Nominated by DCMP 

Filter by Year:


Brian M. Andersen [2023]
Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen
Citation: For groundbreaking contributions to the understanding of disorder and inhomogeneity in the superconducting state of correlated electron systems, and for the development of spin-fluctuation pairing methods in realistic materials.


Anton Andreev [2023]
University of Washington
Citation: For advancing the theory of electronic quantum transport.


Erez Berg [2023]
Weizmann Institute of Science
Citation: For fundamental contributions to the theory of highly correlated electronic systems, including groundbreaking contributions to the theory of metallic quantum criticality, symmetry protected topological order, topological superconductivity, twisted bilayer graphene, and pair density wave order.


Anton Burkov [2023]
University of Waterloo
Citation: For significant contributions to establishing Weyl semimetals and Weyl metals as gapless topological phases, and for elucidating their topological response in magneto-transport and magneto-optics.


Fiona J. Burnell [2023]
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Citation: For outstanding contributions toward the elucidation of exotic phases of matter, including topological phases that are not described by the conventional Landau classification based on broken symmetries.


Nicholas P. Butch [2023]
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Citation: For extraordinary and wide-ranging contributions to the synthesis and experimental study of exotic superconducting, magnetic, and topologically nontrivial quantum materials.


Professor Amalia I. Coldea [2023]
University of Oxford
Citation: For pioneering studies of the electronic structure and the nematic and superconducting orders of iron-based superconductors, using quantum oscillations, photoemission, and other techniques.


Cory R. Dean [2023]
Columbia University
Citation: For seminal contributions to the study of two-dimensional materials and their heterostructures.


Wei Guo [2023]
Florida State University
Citation: For the development and advancement of flow visualization techniques using both molecular tracers and solidified particle tracers in liquid helium and their application to the study of quantum fluid dynamics in superfluid 4He.


Chaoxing Liu [2023]
Pennsylvania State University
Citation: For significant contributions to the theoretical studies of topological insulators and the quantum anomalous Hall effect.


Andriy Nevidomskyy [2023]
Rice University
Citation: For theoretical contributions improving our understanding of the collective behavior of electrons in quantum materials, including novel phases in unconventional superconductors and strongly frustrated quantum magnets.


Marco Polini [2023]
University of Pisa
Citation: For contributions to the theory of interacting electrons in solids, including the theory of electron hydrodynamics in graphene.


Kai Sun [2023]
University of Michigan
Citation: For ground-breaking and long-standing contributions to the theory of topological insulators and superconductors, and for applications to soft matter systems.


Gertrud Zwicknagl [2023]
Technische Universitaet Braunschweig
Citation: For original and paramount contributions to the theory of emergent solid-state materials, in particular, for groundbreaking advances toward the quantitative microscopic understanding of strongly correlated systems on the basis of their atomistic and electronic structure.