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Professor Francois Englert, shown receiving his from King Carl XVI of Sweden, is listed by the Nobel organization as the third most popular physics laureate in the history of the award. is No. 1

can transform our future,” Tollaksen said. “Institute members are world renowned for addressing both the deepest puzzles that confront our understanding of the universe and for developing new, practical applications identified as critical by many government agencies.” U.S. Secretary of Energy , himself a Nobel laureate and participant in the December ceremony in Stockholm, has called the research performed at the Chapman institute “important to the strength of the nation.” That research includes a new field called “quantum cryptography,” which touches issues of national security, individual privacy and protection of the nation’s power grid. ACCELERATED IMPACT As for Englert, he’s working on a theory of For a breakthrough that helps explain universal mysteries, weak values first proposed by Yakir Aharonov, renowned professor of theoretical physics at Francois Englert wins the 2013 , Chapman. For his own groundbreaking work, speeding the rise of Chapman’s Institute for Quantum Studies. Aharonov has been awarded the National Medal of Science. heoretical Francois Englert his home in Belgium and asked how it feels As a Nobel laureate at Chapman, Englert explores in a realm with a scale of to win a Nobel, he answered, “Well, you may also joins Vernon L. Smith, professor of Tone billionth the size of an atom, imagine that this is not very unpleasant.” economics and law and founding member and his breakthrough theory involves a Englert accepted the prize from the device that’s 18 miles in circumference. King of Sweden during a ceremony Dec. 10 Perhaps that’s why it can be hard for in Stockholm. The honor caps a dynamic non-scientists to get their arms around first year in the life of Chapman’s Institute the magnitude of his impact. for Quantum Studies, which now is home But at its core, his work is elemental. to three Nobel-winning Distinguished Englert, founding member of the Institute Visiting Professors: Englert, Sir Anthony for Quantum Studies at Chapman University, Leggett and David Gross. helped develop a theory to explain the The institute already has hosted several very origin of mass, allowing high-profile conferences, bringing together to solve some of the deepest mysteries of some of the top minds in a field of study the universe. And after many decades of that’s at the heart of many technological painstaking work, the Brout-Englert-Higgs advances, from the transistor to smartphones At Chapman, Englert works with Institute for Quantum particle was confirmed thanks to to satellites. Recently the institute launched Studies colleagues Yakir Aharonov, center, and Jeff Tollaksen, left. Englert's current work is on Aharonov’s what many are calling the most spectacular a new journal called Quantum Studies and groundbreaking theory of weak values. experiment ever performed, using the largest released a cutting-edge research book titled device in the world, a particle accelerator. Quantum Theory: A Two-Time Success Story, of Chapman’s Economic Science Institute, In recognition, Englert was awarded the both edited by Chapman Chancellor Daniele who won the 2002 Nobel in Economics; 2013 Nobel Prize, which puts him in the Struppa and Professor Jeff Tollaksen, and Elie Wiesel, Chapman Presidential Fellow, company of earth-shakers such as Einstein, director of the institute. acclaimed author, human rights advocate Bohr and Curie. It’s no wonder then that “One of the institute’s goals is to continue and Holocaust survivor, who received the when Englert was notified of the award at to foster major scientific breakthroughs that in 1989.

To see a brief video of Francois Englert explaining the Brout-Englert- particle and view his lecture at a Chapman conference, visit www.chapman.edu/magazine.

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