Ludwik Leibler
0 sources
Ludwik Leibler
Summary
Ludwik Leibler is a human[1]. His place of birth was Warsaw[2]. He was born on +1951-09-02T00:00:00Z[3]. He worked as a physicist[4], chemist[5], and university teacher[6]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (6 views/month, #7,295 of 1,000,298).[7]
Key Facts
- Ludwik Leibler's place of birth was Warsaw[2].
- Ludwik Leibler was born on +1951-09-02T00:00:00Z[3].
- Ludwik Leibler held citizenship in France[8].
- Ludwik Leibler held citizenship in Poland[9].
- Ludwik Leibler's professions included physicist[4].
- Ludwik Leibler's professions included chemist[5].
- Ludwik Leibler's professions included university teacher[6].
- Ludwik Leibler's field of work was polymer science[10].
- Ludwik Leibler's field of work was macromolecular physics[11].
- Ludwik Leibler's field of work was polymer[12].
- Ludwik Leibler's field of work was macromolecular substance[13].
- Among Ludwik Leibler's employers was ESPCI Paris, PSL University[14].
- Ludwik Leibler was educated at University of Warsaw[15].
- Ludwik Leibler received the European Inventor Award[16].
- Ludwik Leibler received the CNRS silver medal[17].
- Ludwik Leibler received the Descartes-Huygens Prize[18].
- Ludwik Leibler received the Grand prix Pierre-Süe[19].
- Ludwik Leibler received the CNRS innovation medal[20].
- Ludwik Leibler received the Polymer Physics Prize[21].
- Ludwik Leibler was a member of French Academy of Sciences[22].
- Ludwik Leibler was a member of Academia Europaea[23].
- Ludwik Leibler is recorded as male[24].
- Ludwik Leibler's instance of is recorded as human[25].
- Ludwik Leibler supervised Daniel Broseta as a doctoral student[26].
- Ludwik Leibler supervised Christian Ligoure as a doctoral student[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Ludwik Leibler's place of birth was Warsaw[2]. He was born on +1951-09-02T00:00:00Z[3].
Education
Ludwik Leibler was educated at University of Warsaw[15].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include physicist[4], chemist[5], and university teacher[6]. Fields of work include polymer science[10], an academic discipline[28]; macromolecular physics[11]; polymer[12], a group or class of chemical substances[29]; and macromolecular substance[13]. Among Ludwik Leibler's employers was ESPCI Paris, PSL University[14]. Doctoral students include Daniel Broseta[26], a researcher[30], b. 1961[31]; Christian Ligoure[27]; and Laurent Corté[32], a researcher[33], b. 1978[34].
Recognition
Awards received include European Inventor Award[16], an award[35], founded in 2006[36]; CNRS silver medal[17], a science award[37], in France[38], founded in 1954[39]; Descartes-Huygens Prize[18], an award[40], in Netherlands[41], founded in 1995[42]; Grand prix Pierre-Süe[19], a science award[43], in France[44], founded in 1974[45]; CNRS innovation medal[20], a science award[46]; and Polymer Physics Prize[21], a science award[47], in United States[48], founded in 1960[49].
Why It Matters
Ludwik Leibler ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (6 views/month, #7,295 of 1,000,298).[7] He has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[50]
He is credited with the discovery of Vitrimers[51], an organic matter[52].
FAQs
Where was Ludwik Leibler born?
Ludwik Leibler was born in Warsaw[2].
What did Ludwik Leibler do for work?
Ludwik Leibler worked as physicist[4], chemist[5], and university teacher[6].
Where did Ludwik Leibler go to school?
Ludwik Leibler was educated at University of Warsaw[15].
What awards did Ludwik Leibler receive?
Honors received include European Inventor Award[16], CNRS silver medal[17], Descartes-Huygens Prize[18], and Grand prix Pierre-Süe[19].
What did Ludwik Leibler discover?
Ludwik Leibler is credited as discoverer of Vitrimers[51].