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Renewable Fuels Action Summit Biographies
Steve Chu
Dr. Steve Chu became Berkeley Lab's sixth Director on August 1, 2004. He is also
Professor of Physics and Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology at the
University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Chu has become an international
leading advocate for advanced energy research and policies that reduce
carbon emissions and reduces man's impact on the environment. While at
Berkeley Lab, Dr. Chu has lead the effort to create the Helios Energy
Research Initiative. The Helios Initiative has attracted almost $1 billion
in advanced energy research funding over the next 10 years to the Lab and to
the adjacent University of California Berkeley.
His distinguished career in laboratory research began as a postdoctoral
fellow in physics at the University of California's Berkeley campus from
1976-78, during which time he also utilized the facilities of Berkeley Lab.
His first career appointment was as a member of the technical staff at AT&T
Bell Laboratories from 1978-87. He spent many years there as the Head of the
Quantum Electronics Department, during which time he began his
groundbreaking work in cooling and trapping atoms by using laser light.
In 1987, he became a professor in the Physics and Applied Physics
Departments at Stanford University. His work eventually led to the Nobel
Prize in Physics in 1997, an honor he shared with Claude Cohen-Tannoudji of
France and United States colleague William D. Phillips. Their discoveries
were instrumental in the study of fundamental phenomena and in measuring
important physical quantities with unprecedented precision.
Dr. Chu was the Theodore and Francis Geballe Professor of Physics and
Applied Physics at Stanford University, where he remained for 17 years as
highly decorated scientist, teacher and administrator. At Stanford, he
helped start Bio-X, a multi-disciplinary initiative linking the physical and
biological sciences with engineering and medicine. He has become active in
the energy problem and is co-chairing an international InterAcademy Council
(IAC) study, "Lighting the way: Toward a Sustainable Energy Future;
Transitioning to Sustainable Energy." The IAC represents over 90 national
academics of science around the world.
He has held numerous visiting lectureships that include Harvard University,
the JILA Institute, Collège de France, Oxford and Cambridge.
He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), the American
Philosophical Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the
Academia Sinica, and is a foreign member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
and of the Korean Academy of Science and Engineering.
He serves on the Boards of the Hewlett Foundation, the University of
Rochester, and NVIDIA. He has served on a number of committees, including
the Augustine Committee that produced the report "Rising Above the Gathering
Storm" in 2006, the Advisory Committee to the Director of both the National
Institutes of Health and the National Nuclear Security Agency, and was a
member of the Executive Committee of the NAS Board on Physics and Astronomy.
Dr. Chu was also the Co-Chair of the InterAcademy Council's Working Group on
a Sustainable Energy Future, and currently serves on the National Academy's
Committee on America's Energy Future.
Born in St. Louis and raised in New York, Dr. Chu earned an A.B. in
mathematics and a B.S. in physics from the University of Rochester, a Ph.D
in physics from UC Berkeley, and ten honorary degrees. He maintains a
vigorous research program and directly supervises a team of graduate
students and postdoctoral fellows. He is author or co-author of more than
200 articles and professional papers, and over two dozen former members of
his group are now professors at leading research universities around the
world.
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