Distinguished Guests of the
1998 California State Science Fair
Steven Chu
Steven
Chu is the Theodore and Frances Geballe Professor of Physics and
Applied Physics at Stanford
University.
Along with Claude
Cohen-Tannoudji and William Phillips he was awarded the
1997 Nobel Prize in Physics for the
development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light.
Other awards he has received include
Fellowship of the
American Physical Society (1987), of the
Optical Society of America (1990), and of the
American Academy of Arts and
Sciences (1992).
He received the American Physical Society's
Broida
Prize for Laser Spectroscopy(1987),
the Richtmyer
Memorial Prize Lecture of the
American Association of Physics
Teachers (1990),
was co-winner of the King Faisal International Prize for Science (1993),
American Physical Society's
Arthur
Schawlow Prize for Laser Science(1994),
and the Optical Society of America's
William
F. Meggers Award for Spectroscopy and Metrology(1994).
He is a member of the
National Academy of Sciences,
and the Academia Sinica
(Warning: slow link!).
He has been at Stanford since 1987 in the Departments of
Applied
Physics and
Physics,
where he served as chair from 1990-1993. Prior to coming to Stanford
he was Head of the Quantum Electronics Department at AT&T Bell
Laboratories.
Professor Chu will deliver the Keynote Address at
the Opening Ceremony on Monday night.
Gayle Wilson
Gayle Wilson is
California's First Lady. She and her husband,
Governor Pete
Wilson, are Honorary Co-Chairs of the 1998 California State Science
Fair. Raised in Arizona, as a student she participated in science
fairs where, as a senior in high school, she was selected as one of
only 40 Finalists in the country for the
Westinghouse
Science Talent Search. As a college student at
Stanford University she received
a degree in Biology and earned her Phi Beta Kappa key. As a public
citizen, she has promoted the cause of excellence in science and
scientific literacy. She was a founding member of the San Diego
chapter of Achievement Rewards for College Scientists and served as
Chairman of the Board of Trustees for the Center for Excellence in
Education in 1993 and 1994. She has been an Honorary Co-Chair of the
California State Science Fair for six years, coming each year to the
Fair to deliver her inspirational message.
Gayle Wilson will speak at the Tuesday morning Orientation Session
prior to the Judging of Projects. Subsequently, she will tour the
projects to speak with participants.
Kobie Boykins
Kobie Boykins is a member of the technical staff at the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
having worked on the Mars
Pathfinder project. Presently he is the mechanical lead for mobility
on the Nanorover technology task which has been picked up by the
Japanese Space Agency (ISAS)
(Warning: slow link!)
to fly on their mission MUSES-C. He is also mechanical lead for
mobility on the Subsurface Explorer (SSX) technology task, and is
working in support of the Free Flying Magnetometer flight project, the
2001 Mars flight project,
the Solar
Probe spacecraft project, and the
Stardust flight
project, the first U.S. mission to robotically obtain samples from
deep space (from Comet Wild 2) and return them to Earth.
Kobie Boykins will be the Master of Ceremonies at the Awards Ceremony
Tuesday afternoon.
California State Science Fair
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1998
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Distinguished Guests
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CalifSF@usc.edu