Aspen Center for Physics


The Aspen Center for Physics is a non-profit institution for physics research located in Aspen, Colorado, in the Rocky Mountains region of the United States. Since its foundation in 1962, it has hosted distinguished physicists for short-term visits during seasonal winter and summer programs, to promote collaborative research in fields including astrophysics, cosmology, condensed matter physics, string theory, quantum physics, biophysics, and more.
To date, sixty-six of the center's affiliates have won Nobel Prizes in Physics and three have won Fields Medals in mathematics. Its affiliates have garnered a wide array of other national and international distinctions, among them the Abel Prize, the Dirac Medal, the Guggenheim Fellowship, the MacArthur Prize, and the Breakthrough Prize. Its visitors have included figures such as the cosmologist and gravitational theorist Stephen Hawking, the particle physicist Murray Gell-Mann, the condensed matter theorist Philip W. Anderson, and the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Margaret Thatcher.
In addition to serving as a locus for physics research, the ACP's mission has entailed public outreach: offering programs to educate the general public about physics and to stimulate interest in the subject among youth.

History & public outreach

The Aspen Center for Physics was founded in 1962 by three people: George Stranahan, Michael Cohen, and Robert W. Craig. George Stranahan, then a postdoctoral fellow at Purdue University, played a critical role in raising funds and early public support for the initiative. He later left physics to become a craft brewer, rancher, and entrepreneur, although he remained a lifelong supporter of the center. Stranahan's enterprises included the Flying Dog Brewery. Michael Cohen was a professor at the University of Pennsylvania and a condensed matter physicist whose work investigated the properties of real-world material systems such as ferroelectrics, liquid helium, and biological membranes. Robert W. Craig was the first director of the Aspen Institute, an international non-profit center which supports the exchange of ideas on matters relating to public policy.
From its establishment, the ACP has developed a close relationship with the city of Aspen and has contributed to the cultural life of the local community. It has collaborated with other institutions such as the Aspen Institute, the Aspen Music Festival, the Wheeler Opera House, the Aspen Science Center, and the Pitkin County Library.  
The center has benefitted from the generosity of public support, notably from the National Science Foundation, the US Department of Energy, NASA, and from the gifts of private donors. These funds have helped to bring hundreds of scientists to the center every year, and have enabled the ACP to host a wide array of public lectures and activities.
In addition to sponsoring these public events at its campus in Aspen, the ACP has also broadcast programs on a local-access television station – the “Physics Preview” show on Grassrootstv.org – and on radio, via its ″Radio Physics″ program for high school students on the KDNK station.

Supporters & donors

The Aspen Center for Physics has benefitted over the years from many acts of philanthropy.  Gifts from Aspen donors as well as from George Stranahan, Martin Flug, the Smart Family Foundation, and affiliated physicists have been especially important to sustaining the center's development and operation.
George Stranahan was an early driving force behind the establishment and funding of the ACP. After convincing the Aspen Institute to open in 1961 an independent physics division, where scientists could convene to conduct research, he began raising funds to open the Aspen Center for Physics, by collecting donations from locals and Aspen Institute participants. Stranahan raised funds for the original ACP building at a cost of $85,000, while contributing $38,000 himself. To recognize the central role that Stranahan played in establishing the center, the first building constructed on the ACP campus is named in his honor as Stranahan Hall. It was designed by Herbert Bayer, who pioneered Aspen's post-World War Two architectural revitalization.
Martin Flug, an Aspen businessman who had been interested in physics since his undergraduate time at Harvard University, funded the construction of an auditorium and a lecture series to accompany it: the Flug Forum. The auditorium is named to honor Flug's father Samuel Flug, an investment banker who was born in Warsaw, Poland and who died in 1962.
The Smart Family Foundation of Connecticut funded the construction of Smart Hall, a building on the ACP campus erected in 1996. The gift was arranged by A. Douglas Stone, a member of the Smart family, a physicist at Yale University, and a past ACP Scientific Secretary, Trustee, General Member, and Honorary Member.
The third building on the ACP campus, Bethe Hall, is named after Hans Bethe, the German-American nuclear physicist, based at Cornell University. Bethe donated part of his prize money to the ACP after winning the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1967 for his work on stellar nucleosynthesis. Bethe was a long-standing participant at the center: he was vice president and Trustee in the 1970s, then an Honorary Trustee from the 1970s until his death in 2005.
Following Bethe's example, several other physicists whose achievements merited awards went on to donate part of their prize money to the ACP.  Recognizing these scientist-donors, the ACP established the “Bethe Circle.”
Name of PhysicistAwardYear
Gordon BaymAPS Medal for Exceptional Achievement in Research2021
Daniel FreedmanSpecial Breakthrough Prize2019
Vassiliki KalogeraHans A. Bethe Prize2016
Greg MooreDannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics2014
Hirosi OoguriHamburg Prize for Theoretical Physics2018
Pierre RamondDannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics2015
John SchwarzPhysics Frontiers Prize2013
Matthias TroyerAneesur Rahman Prize for Computational Physics2016

Luminaries

ACP participants have included hundreds of post–doctoral fellows, professors, researchers and experimentalists who have come for short-term visits. Some had already achieved distinction before coming to the center; others won prizes or gained international recognition after spending time at the ACP early in their careers. Dozens of ACP physicists have received prestigious awards for their work, including the Nobel Prize in Physics.
The following scientists have participated at the Aspen Center for Physics at least once. Several have attended for a number of years.
Nobel LaureateYear of Prize
Philip Warren Anderson1977
Arthur Ashkin2018
John Bardeen1956, 1972
Barry C. Barish2017
Hans Bethe1967
Owen Chamberlain1959
Steven Chu1997
Leon N. Cooper1972
Francis Harry C. Crick1962
James Watson Cronin1980
Richard Feynman1965
Val Logsdon Fitch1980
William Alfred Fowler1983
Murray Gell-Mann1969
Andrea Ghez2020
Riccardo Giacconi2002
Donald A. Glaser1960
Sheldon L. Glashow1979
David Gross2004
Duncan M. Haldane2016
John L. Hall2005
Robert Hofstadter1961
Russell Hulse1993
Brian D. Josephson1973
Takaaki Kajita2015
Wolfgang Ketterle2001
Walter Kohn1998
Masatoshi Koshiba2002
John M. Kosterlitz2016
Robert B. Laughlin1998
Leon Max Lederman1988
David Morris Lee1996
Tsung-Dao Lee1957
Anthony James Leggett2003
John C. Mather2006
Michel Mayor2019
W.E. Moerner2014
Yoichiro Nambu2008
Konstantin S. Novoselov2010
Douglas D. Osheroff1996
P. James E. Peebles2019
Roger Penrose2020
Martin L. Perl1995
Saul Perlmutter2011
Edward M. Purcell1952
Didier Queloz2019
Norman Foster Ramsey1989
Frederick Reines1995
Robert C. Richardson1996
Adam Riess2011
Carlo Rubbia1984
Brian Schmidt2011
J. Robert Schrieffer1972
George Smoot2006
Gerardus 't Hooft1999
Joseph H. Taylor1993
Kip S. Thorne2017
David J. Thouless2016
Samuel C. C. Ting1976
Charles Hard Townes1964
Daniel Tsui1998
Martinus J.G. Veltman1999
Rainer Weiss2017
Carl E. Wieman2001
Frank Wilczek2004
Kenneth Geddes Wilson1982

Abel LaureatesYear of Prize
Karen Uhlenbeck2019
Isador M. Singer2004