ICTP Dirac Medallists 2009 announced
ICTP awards prestigious Dirac Medal to simulation experts
ICTP has announced that the recipients of its 2009 Dirac
Medal are Roberto Car and Michele Parrinello for their
revolutionary "molecular dynamics" numerical simulation method for
condensed matter.
Their work, known as the Car-Parrinello method, combines
quantitative electronic energy calculation, via a theory known as
Density Functional Theory (DFT), with Newtonian molecular dynamics
simulation of the mechanical motion of atoms and molecules in real
time. That method has provided an all-important quantitative
understanding of the properties of matter, while also allowing
scientists and laymen alike to visualise atoms in motion during
physical and chemical processes.
"With this year's Dirac Medal, ICTP acknowledges the enormous
impact the Car-Parrinello method has made on the creation of
molecular simulations," said ICTP Director K. R. Sreenivasan. He
added: "This is the first time that the Dirac Medal recognises
computational physics properly, the Car-Parrinello method being a
major milestone in that area."
"Up to the 1980s, molecular dynamics simulation was mostly a game.
Because it was so very time consuming to calculate the electronic
forces that act on atoms, scientists just could not do it fast
enough to use them on the fly. So, the simulations were done using
invented forces," said Erio Tosatti, former Acting Director of ICTP
and a condensed matter researcher who brought Car and Parrinello to
the University of Trieste and to the International School for
Advanced Studies (SISSA, next door to ICTP) in the late
1970s.
Car and Parrinello's clever and elegant trick around the problem
treats the DFT electronic parameters as fictitious additional
atomic coordinates, and applies Newtonian mechanics to their
motion. They published a paper on their method in the November 1985
issue of the journal Physical Review Letters; the paper now ranks
sixth among the journal's top cited articles, with a total of 5027
citations. The work created a new paradigm, now an indispensable
tool of every computational condensed matter physicist, chemist,
and even biologist.
Born in Trieste, Roberto Car is a professor in the Chemistry
Department at Princeton University, New Jersey, USA.
Michele Parrinello, who was born in Messina, Italy, is a professor
at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich).
ICTP's Dirac Medal is
given in honour of P.A.M. Dirac, one of the greatest physicists of
the 20th century and a staunch friend of the Centre. It is awarded
annually on Dirac's birthday, 8 August, to scientists who have made
significant contributions to physics. The Medallists also receive a
prize of US $5,000.
An award ceremony will be held in early 2010.