Dear colleagues,
TWAS has just
announced that they have awarded their prestigious Abdus Salam
Medal to ICTP Director Fernando Quevedo. The official
announcement is below and available on ICTP's website.
Professor Quevedo will deliver his Abdus Salam Medal Lecture
tonight at 18:00, and all staff are invited to attend. The
lecture will take place in the SISSA Building auditorium on
via Beirut. It will also be livestreamed at https://twas.org/meeting/twass-28th-general-meeting
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ICTP's
Quevedo Wins Salam Medal
ICTP Director Fernando Quevedo has been awarded the Abdus
Salam Medal at the TWAS 28th General Meeting in Trieste,
Italy.
The World Academy of Sciences (TWAS) today awarded its
prestigious Abdus Salam Medal to Fernando Quevedo for his
strong leadership of the Abdus Salam International Centre for
Theoretical Physics (ICTP) and his efforts to build science in
the developing world.
Quevedo, a Guatemalan theoretical physicist and TWAS Fellow,
has served as ICTP's director since 2009. He has credited
Salam with being a role model and an inspiration, saying that
he sought to emulate Salam's balanced commitment to scientific
research and to building scientific institutions for
developing countries.
"Professor Quevedo's leadership has had a profound impact on
the field of physics in the developing world," said TWAS
President Bai Chunli. "ICTP is a thriving institution, and in
recent years it has helped to open important new research
centres in developing countries. And he has been a very
important friend to TWAS. In these ways and others, he
embodies Abdus Salam's deep commitment to our shared mission."
Said Quevedo: "As I near the end of my term as ICTP director,
I am pleased to be given such prestigious recognition by TWAS.
For the past nine years, Abdus Salam's vision for ICTP has
guided my efforts in building the centre to what it enjoys
today: a vastly expanded presence throughout the developing
world, strongly committed to a mission of promoting scientific
excellence and opportunities for all. To be recognized for
these efforts by an award named after ICTP's founder is a
great honour for me."
Salam led efforts to found ICTP in 1964 and TWAS in 1983, and
through much of his career he wrote prolifically and travelled
the world to advocate the idea that science and technology are
essential for bringing the poorest countries out of poverty.
At the same time he continued his research, and won the Nobel
Prize in physics in 1979.
His vision is credited with helping to inspire an
international science-for-development movement. In nations
such as Brazil, China, India and South Africa, investments in
research, technology and education have helped to drive
historic advances in economic development and human
well-being.
TWAS inaugurated The Abdus Salam Medal in 1995, a year before
his death. The medal is awarded to highly distinguished
scholars who have served the cause of science in the
developing world.
Among past winners have been entomologist Thomas R. Odhiambo
of Kenyan, a giant of African science who was a founding
Fellow of TWAS; Italian physicist Paolo Budinich, who was
Salam's partner in founding ICTP and TWAS; and former TWAS
Presidents José I. Vargas of Brazil, C.N.R. Rao of India, and
Jacob Palis of Brazil.
An early inspiration
Quevedo was born in 1956 in Costa Rica and obtained early
education in Guatemala. He earned his PhD from the University
of Texas at Austin in 1986. His early career included research
appointments at CERN in Switzerland; McGill University in
Canada; Institut de Physique in Switzerland; and Los Alamos
National Laboratory in the United States.
In one sense, winning the Abdus Salam Medal brings Quevedo
full circle to his days as a PhD student in Texas. He was
studying there under Steven Weinberg, who had shared the Nobel
Prize with Salam a few years earlier. Salam came to deliver a
lecture; that was Quevedo's first in-person encounter with
him.
"I didn't talk to him when he came, because he was such a big
figure and I was just a student," Quevedo recalled in an
interview. "But I had great admiration for him, especially
after realising what ICTP was. My dream was to do something
like that for Central America – but then I realised that he
had already done something for the whole world, and much
bigger."
Once his PhD studies were complete, Quevedo's first job offer
came in a telegramme from Salam – a postdoctoral position at
ICTP in Trieste. Quevedo also received an offer from CERN in
Switzerland, and he decided to go there. But, he said, Salam
invited him to spend three weeks in Trieste before starting
his post at CERN.
Quevedo arrived and made an appointment with Salam. "He was
very, very kind," he said. "We talked for at least an hour,
just the two of us. We shared ideas and I told him my dreams –
I was just a young person, talking to a senior person who had
accomplished so much and who seemed to know everything."
ICTP's dynamic expansion
And then Salam did something that made a lasting impression:
He had other appointments that afternoon, but he invited the
young researcher to stay, to watch and listen. The other
guests presented their ideas; Salam asked questions and
offered smart, constructive feedback.
"It was very inspiring for me to see him in action," Quevedo
remembers.
In the ensuing years, Quevedo built a high-impact career. In
1998, he was awarded the ICTP Prize for his important
contributions to superstring theory. In 2009, he was appointed
director of ICTP, succeeding Katepalli Sreenivasan. By that
time Quevedo was a well-known theoretical particle physicist
with wide-ranging research interests in string theory,
phenomenology and cosmology. He has been a professor of
theoretical physics at Cambridge University in the United
Kingdom since 2002. He was elected a TWAS Fellow in 2010.
Under Quevedo's leadership, ICTP has expanded dynamically,
moving beyond theoretical science into areas such as energy,
climate science and high-performance computing. But, he said,
there is a consistent focus that cuts across all initiatives:
advancing science in the developing world.
ICTP has increased the number of diploma, masters and PhD
students, and has moved to promote the importance of women in
physics and other areas of science. It has built new
partnerships, both with local universities and research
centres in developing countries.
Combining tradition and innovation
A new focus area – Quantitative Life Sciences – has brought in
five scientists to work at ICTP in an emerging field that
incorporates such disciplines as physics, biochemistry,
statistics and game theory and applies them across the
biological sciences. That is expected to produce new insights
in medicine, genetics and environmental science. For ICTP,
Quevedo says, that's "a major achievement".
ICTP also has started a master's degree programme in medical
physics, teaming with the University of Trieste, the
International Atomic Energy Agency and local hospitals. The
field has enormous practical applications in areas such as
medical imaging, microscopy, cancer treatment and protection
against radiation. It's not a theoretical science, Quevedo
said, but for many developing countries it’s an area of great
potential value.
While building programmes in Trieste, ICTP in recent years
also has worked with partners to open four international
research centres in developing and emerging countries. All of
them are, or soon will be, UNESCO Category 2 institutes:
"Since the time of Abdus Salam,” Quevedo said, "ICTP has been
playing this key role: showing that scientists from any
country in the world have the potential to be successful and
can contribute to the advancement of science....
"We have to respond to the needs of developing countries. So
we have to be always updated with the latest discoveries and
developments."
Edward Lempinen