- Source: Copernicus Award
The Nicolaus Copernicus Polish-German Research Award (also known as Copernicus Award) is a biannual science award conferred by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and Foundation for Polish Science "to the individuals most active in Polish-German scientific cooperation who have made exceptional research achievements as a result of that cooperation." The award was established in 2006 and is named after Renaissance astronomer and polymath Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543). It carries a cash prize of €200,000 shared equally by two winners, one from Germany and one from Poland. In order to be eligible for the award, candidates must have at least a doctoral degree and work in Polish or German scientific institutions.
Permanent members of the Jury of the Copernicus Award include: Grażyna Jurkowlaniec (University of Warsaw) – chair of the Jury; Immo Fritsche (Leipzig University) – deputy chair of the Jury; Bernd Büchner (IFW Dresden); Paweł Idziak (Jagiellonian University); Maria Mittag (University of Jena); Marek Samoć (Wrocław University of Technology).
Copernicus Award winners
See also
List of general science and technology awards
Prize of the Foundation for Polish Science
Polish-German relations
Brückepreis
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Albert Einstein
- Stephen Hawking
- John Banville
- Filsafat ilmu
- Polandia
- Paus Fransiskus
- Astronomi
- Civilization
- Daftar pastor ilmuwan Katolik
- Copernicus Award
- Nicolaus Copernicus
- Copernicus (disambiguation)
- Piotr Ponikowski
- Nelson Rockefeller
- Copernicus Programme
- Jacek Błażewicz
- Andrzej Sobolewski
- Marek Żukowski
- Copernicus (lunar crater)