ENSIKLOPEDIA Cari Tekan Enter untuk memulai pencarian cepat. Kembali ke Ensiklopedia Arsip Wikipedia Indonesia Shaun Cole Shaun ColeBritish cosmologist and academic This article is about the British cosmologist. For the American baseball coach, see Shaun Cole (baseball). Shaun ColeBornChipping, Lancashire, EnglandAlma materJesus College, OxfordClare College, CambridgeKnown forDiscovery of Baryon Acoustic Oscillations, Semi-analytical Models in Galaxy FormationAwardsShaw Prize (2014)Scientific careerFieldsCosmology, Galaxy formation, Galactic AstronomyInstitutionsUniversity of California BerkeleyDurham UniversityDoctoral advisorGeorge Efstathiou and Nick Kaiser Websitestar-www.dur.ac.uk/~cole Shaun Malcolm Cole (born 19 November 1963) is a British cosmologist. Cole grew up in Chipping, Lancashire.[1] He graduated from Jesus College, Oxford with a first-class degree in Physics in 1985, and subsequently completed Part III of the Mathematical Tripos at the University of Cambridge. His performance in Part III was strong enough to earn a studentship for a PhD at the Cambridge Institute of Astronomy.[1] Cole has been Professor of Physics at Durham University since 2005 and was the director of the Institute for Computational Cosmology (2020-2025).[2][3][4] He was joint-winner of the 2014 Shaw Prize with Daniel Eisenstein and John A. Peacock.[5] References 1 2 "Shaun Cole". Shaun Cole's Home Page. Durham University. Retrieved 2 May 2025. ↑ "Biographical Notes of Laureates". The Shaw Prize Foundation. 24 September 2014. Retrieved 25 November 2022. ↑ "Curriculum Vitae". Durham University. Retrieved 5 June 2014. ↑ "Institute for Computational Cosmology". Durham University. Retrieved 20 November 2020. ↑ "The Shaw Prize in Astronomy 2014". The Shaw Prize Foundation. 27 May 2014. Archived from the original on 29 April 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022. vteShaw Prize laureatesAstronomy Jim Peebles (2004) Geoffrey Marcy and Michel Mayor (2005) Saul Perlmutter, Adam Riess and Brian Schmidt (2006) Peter Goldreich (2007) Reinhard Genzel (2008) Frank Shu (2009) Charles Bennett, Lyman Page and David Spergel (2010) Enrico Costa and Gerald Fishman (2011) David C. Jewitt and Jane Luu (2012) Steven Balbus and John F. Hawley (2013) Daniel Eisenstein, Shaun Cole and John A. Peacock (2014) William J. Borucki (2015) Ronald Drever, Kip Thorne and Rainer Weiss (2016) Simon White (2017) Jean-Loup Puget (2018) Edward C. Stone (2019) Roger Blandford (2020) Victoria Kaspi and Chryssa Kouveliotou (2021) Lennart Lindegren and Michael Perryman (2022) Matthew Bailes, Duncan Lorimer and Maura McLaughlin (2023) Shrinivas R. Kulkarni (2024) John Richard Bond, George Efstathiou (2025) Life scienceand medicine Stanley Norman Cohen, Herbert Boyer, Yuet-Wai Kan and Richard Doll (2004) Michael Berridge (2005) Xiaodong Wang (2006) Robert Lefkowitz (2007) Ian Wilmut, Keith H. S. Campbell and Shinya Yamanaka (2008) Douglas Coleman and Jeffrey Friedman (2009) David Julius (2010) Jules Hoffmann, Ruslan Medzhitov and Bruce Beutler (2011) Franz-Ulrich Hartl and Arthur L. Horwich (2012) Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W. Young (2013) Kazutoshi Mori and Peter Walter (2014) Bonnie Bassler and Everett Peter Greenberg (2015) Adrian Bird and Huda Zoghbi (2016) Ian R. Gibbons and Ronald Vale (2017) Mary-Claire King (2018) Maria Jasin (2019) Gero Miesenböck, Peter Hegemann and Georg Nagel (2020) Scott D. Emr (2021) Paul A. Negulescu and Michael J. Welsh (2022) Patrick Cramer and Eva Nogales (2023) Stuart H. Orkin and Swee Lay Thein (2024) Wolfgang Baumeister (2025) Mathematicalscience Shiing-Shen Chern (2004) Andrew Wiles (2005) David Mumford and Wentsun Wu (2006) Robert Langlands and Richard Taylor (2007) Vladimir Arnold and Ludwig Faddeev (2008) Simon Donaldson and Clifford Taubes (2009) Jean Bourgain (2010) Demetrios Christodoulou and Richard S. Hamilton (2011) Maxim Kontsevich (2012) David Donoho (2013) George Lusztig (2014) Gerd Faltings and Henryk Iwaniec (2015) Nigel Hitchin (2016) János Kollár and Claire Voisin (2017) Luis Caffarelli (2018) Michel Talagrand (2019) Alexander Beilinson and David Kazhdan (2020) Jean-Michel Bismut and Jeff Cheeger (2021) Noga Alon and Ehud Hrushovski (2022) Vladimir Drinfeld and Shing-Tung Yau (2023) Peter Sarnak (2024) Kenji Fukaya (2025) Authority control databases InternationalVIAFAcademicsORCIDGoogle ScholarOtherIdRefYale LUX This article about a physicist of the United Kingdom is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.vte