Jun Kondo

June Kondō (Japanese近藤 淳, Kondō June; born February 6, 1930) is a theoretical physicist in Japan. According to him, told him of Kondo effect is named.

Life

Kondō studied physics at the University of Tokyo with the completion in 1954 and his doctorate in 1959. Subsequently, he worked as a researcher at Nihon University ( 1959), at the Institute for Solid State Physics, University of Tokyo ( 1960-1963 ) and at the Electrotechnical Institute (ETL ) active on which he was electron physics from 1983 Head of the Department and remained there until his retirement in 1990. He subsequently Emeritus Fellow. He took over in 1990 as a professor at Toho University, where he became Professor Emeritus in 1995.

1966/67, he was a guest scientist at the Bell Laboratories.

Since 1997 he is member of the Japanese Academy of Sciences (Nihon gakushiin ) and since 2001, Special Advisor at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology ( AIST ).

Kondō in 1979 awarded the Asahi Prize and in 1968 he was awarded the Nishina Prize. In 1984 he was awarded the Fujiwara price and the 1987 Fritz London Memorial Award. In 1973 he was awarded the Japan Academy and the Imperial prize and in 2003 he was person of cultural merit. In 2009 he became a member of the National Academy of Sciences.

Works

  • Fermi surface effects: proceedings of the Tsukuba Institute, Tsukuba Science City, Japan, August 27-29, 1987 ( 1988) ( English)
  • The Physics of Dilute Magnetic Alloys, Cambridge University Press, 2012. ISBN 978-1-107-02418-2 (English)
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