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KTH Great Prize to Max Tegmark

KTH Great prize

Published Apr 27, 2015

Physicist and cosmologist Max Tegmark has been named the recipient of this year's Great Prize from KTH Royal Institute of Technology. The Swedish scientist, who is a professor of physics at MIT, follows in the footsteps of prominent scientists such as Carl Sagan and Neil deGrasse Tyson in presenting cosmology to the mass public in a vivid and memorable way.

Tegmark will receive SEK 1.2 million for his work as both a scientist and a communicator on the subjects of the universe and physics.

"By expanding and developing our perspective of mathematics and the universe, we increase our knowledge of the cosmos," the university's citation reads. "The physicist and cosmologist Max Tegmark combines a solid research career with equal parts courage, ingenuity and creativity, by developing innovative ideas and tools.

"His theories place our planet in a larger and more critical context for the future," the statement concludes.

Max Tegmark

Tegmark says he never expected to receive such an honour when he started studying at KTH in 1987. "I'm very grateful for the excellent education that KTH gave me in the area of technical physics. It was then that I fell in love with physics, and I still am.

"I look at KTH as Sweden's MIT: a magnet for visionaries who want to create a better future with the help of science," he says.

Aside from his scientific achievements, Tegmark also is an excellent teacher. His ability to explain how the cosmos works in am understandable way has been documented in countless newspapers and magazines, TV broadcasts and radio programs, bringing to mind such popular scientists as Carl Sagan and Neil deGrasse Tyson. It's no surprise, then, that one of his influences is Sagan.

"Carl Sagan inspired me as a teenager," the 47-year-old Tegmark says. "Neil deGrasse Tyson, I was fortunate to get to know during my postdoc time in Princeton.

"I think that we scientists have an obligation to communicate our findings to those who support us with their tax money, and to the young people who will hopefully become researchers one day."

He also makes a strong case for society to understand cosmology.  "The more powerful the technology we invent, the more we affect our environment and the more important it is that we see the whole picture.

"The climate threat, the threat of nuclear weapons—these more than show that we are dealing with far too little long-term thinking," he says. "Without cosmology, it would be as if humanity suffered from Alzheimer's disease — confused about where we are, where we come from, and where we are going."

Peter Gudmundson, president of KTH, says that he finds Tegmarks efforts impressive.

"Max Tegmark's research has contributed significantly to increasing our understanding of how the universe is built; and his educational achievements are extensive. His theories have received considerable attention, making him one of the world's most cited researchers in his field. Max Tegmark is an excellent example of how far you can go with an engineering degree from KTH Royal Institute of Technology. "

Peter Larsson

Snapshot: Max Tegmark

  • Max Tegmark is a Swedish-American physicist and cosmologist, born May 5, 1967.  He is professor in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
  • Tegmark recevied a Master of Science degree in Engineering Physics from KTH Royal Institute of Technology in 1990. His father, Harold Shapiro, was professor of mathematics at KTH from 1978 to 1993.
  • In 2014, Tegmark published "Our mathematical universe: My search for the ultimate reality".

About the KTH Great Prize

The prize is taken from the proceeds of a donation made in 1944 and which now stands at one million two hundred thousand Swedish kronor. According to the donor, who wished to be and has remained anonymous, the prize shall be awarded to:

A person who, through epoch-making discoveries and the creation of new values and by ingenious applications of findings gained on the practical aspects of life, promotes Sweden's continued material progress, or a person who by means of scientific research has discovered particularly valuable principles or methods which are useful for applications, which promote the above purpose, or a person who through artistic activities "exerts a powerful influence particularly on the spiritual life of her own people."

The recipient must also be a Swedish citizen. 

* You can find the full list of award winners: www.kth.se/om/fakta/fame/kths-stora-pris/samtliga-pristagare-1.3972 "