Christophe Salomon
0 sources
Christophe Salomon
Summary
Christophe Salomon is a human[1]. He was born in Châtellerault[2]. He was born on November 23, 1953[3]. He worked as a physicist[4]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (21 views/month, #7,298 of 1,000,298).[5]
Key Facts
- Christophe Salomon's place of birth was Châtellerault[2].
- Christophe Salomon was born on November 23, 1953[3].
- Christophe Salomon was born on 1953[6].
- Christophe Salomon held citizenship in France[7].
- Christophe Salomon's professions included physicist[4].
- Christophe Salomon held the position of Director of Research at CNRS[8].
- Christophe Salomon received the Gay-Lussac-Humboldt-Prize[9].
- Christophe Salomon received the Mergier Bourdeix Prize[10].
- Christophe Salomon received the Balzan Prize[11].
- Christophe Salomon was a member of French Academy of Sciences[12].
- Christophe Salomon is recorded as male[13].
- Christophe Salomon's instance of is recorded as human[14].
- Christophe Salomon supervised Maxime Dahan as a doctoral student[15].
- Christophe Salomon supervised Florian Schreck as a doctoral student[16].
- Christophe Salomon supervised Sylvain Nascimbène as a doctoral student[17].
- Christophe Salomon supervised Rodolphe Le Targat as a doctoral student[18].
- Christophe Salomon supervised Thomas Salez as a doctoral student[19].
- Christophe Salomon supervised Ragheed Alhyder as a doctoral student[20].
- Christophe Salomon supervised Hélène Perrin as a doctoral student[21].
- Christophe Salomon's family name is recorded as Salomon[22].
- Christophe Salomon's given name is recorded as Christophe[23].
- Christophe Salomon's official website is recorded as http://www.phys.ens.fr/~salomon/[24].
- Christophe Salomon's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as French[25].
- Christophe Salomon's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as English[26].
- Christophe Salomon's maintained by WikiProject is recorded as WikiProject Mathematics[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Born in Châtellerault[2], Christophe Salomon… Recorded date of birth include November 23, 1953[3] and 1953[6].
Career and Affiliations
Christophe Salomon's professions included physicist[4]. He held the position of Director of Research at CNRS[8]. Doctoral students include Maxime Dahan[15], a physical chemist[28], 1972–2018[29], of France[30], awarded the CNRS bronze medal[31]; Florian Schreck[16], a researcher[32], b. 1972[33]; Sylvain Nascimbène[17], a researcher[34], b. 1982[35]; Rodolphe Le Targat[18], a researcher[36], b. 1977[37]; Thomas Salez[19], a researcher[38], b. 1983[39], awarded the CNRS bronze medal[40]; and Ragheed Alhyder[20].
Recognition
Awards received include Gay-Lussac-Humboldt-Prize[9], a science award[41], in France[42], founded in 1981[43]; Mergier Bourdeix Prize[10], a science award[44], in France[45], founded in 1984[46]; and Balzan Prize[11], a science award[47], in Switzerland[48], founded in 1961[49].
Why It Matters
Christophe Salomon ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (21 views/month, #7,298 of 1,000,298).[5]
FAQs
Where was Christophe Salomon born?
Born in Châtellerault[2], Christophe Salomon…
What did Christophe Salomon do for work?
Christophe Salomon worked as physicist[4].
What awards did Christophe Salomon receive?
Honors received include Gay-Lussac-Humboldt-Prize[9], Mergier Bourdeix Prize[10], and Balzan Prize[11].