The National Medal of Science was established on August 25, 1959, by an act of the Congress of the United States under Public Law 86-209. The medal was originally to honor scientists in the fields of the "physical, biological, mathematical, or engineering sciences." The Committee on the National Medal of Science was established on August 23, 1961 by executive order 10961 of former president John F. Kennedy.[2]
The first National Medal of Science was awarded on February 18, 1963, for the year 1962 by President John F. Kennedy to Theodore von Kármán for his work at the Caltech Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The citation accompanying von Kármán's award reads:
Although Public Law 86-209 provides for 20 recipients of the medal per year, it is typical for approximately 12–15 accomplished scientists and engineers to receive this distinction each year. There have been 6 years where no National Medals of Science were awarded between 1962 and 2004. Those years were: 1985, 1984, 1980, 1978, 1977, 1972 and 1971. As of February 13, 2006, there have been a total of 425 individuals recognized.
The award's ceremony is organized by the Office of Science and Technlogy Policy and takes place at the White House.
Each year the National Science Foundation sends out a call to the scientific community for the nomination of new candidates for the National Medal of Science. Individuals are nominated by their peers with each nomination requiring three letters of support from individuals in science and technology. Nominations are then sent to the Committee of the National Medal of Science which is a board composed of fourteen presidential appointees comprising twelve scientists, and two ex officio members - the director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and the president of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS).[5]
The National Medal of Science depicts Man, surrounded by earth, sea, and sky, contemplating and struggling to understand Nature. The crystal in his hand represents the universal order and also suggests the basic unit of living things. The formula being outlined in the sand symbolizes scientific abstraction.
| Year | Laureate | Citation |
| 2007 | Mostafa El-Sayed | "for his seminal and creative contributions to our understanding of the electronic and optical properties of nano-materials and to their applications in nano-catalysis and nano-medicine, for his humanitarian efforts of exchange among countries and for his role in developing the scientific leadership of tomorrow." |
| 2007 | Leonard Kleinrock | "For his fundamental contributions to the mathematical theory of modern data networks, and for the functional specification of packet switching, which is the foundation of Internet technology. His mentoring of generations of students has led to the commercialization of technologies that have transformed the world." |
| 2005 | Torsten Wiesel | "For providing key insights into the operation of the visual system and for the discovery of the manner in which neural connections in the brain are made during development and how they are maintained." |
| 2003 | G. Brent Dalrymple | "For his pioneering work in determining the geomagnetic polarity reversal timescale; a discovery that led to the theory of plate tectonics." |
| 2002 | Calyampudi Radhakrishna Rao | "For his theoretical work which solely help to lay the foundation of modern statistics." |
| 1997 | James D. Watson | "For five decades of scientific and intellectual leadership in molecular biology, ranging from his co-discovery of the double helical structure of DNA to the launching of the Human Genome Project." |
| 1991 | G. Evelyn Hutchinson | (posthumously) |
| 1990 | Stephen Cole Kleene | "For his leadership in the theory of recursion and effective computability and for developing it into a deep and broad field of mathematical research." |
| 1990 | Leonid Hurwicz | "For his pioneering work on the theory of modern decentralized allocation mechanisms." |
| 1990 | Herbert Boyer | "For his contributions to the basic research of the development of recombinant DNA technology. This seminal breakthrough has opened new vistas in experimental biology, and it has led directly to the development of the biotechnology industry." |
| 1989 | Samuel Karlin | "For his broad and remarkable researches in mathematical analysis, probability theory and mathematical statistics, and in the application of these ideas to mathematical economics, mechanics, and population genetics." |
| 1988 | George W Housner | "For his profound and decisive influence on the development of earthquake engineering worldwide." |
| 1987 | James Van Allen | "For his central role in the exploration of outer space, including the discoveries of the magnetospheres of Earth, Jupiter, and Saturn." |
| 1987 | Robert B. Bird | "For his profoundly influential books and research on kinetic theory, transport phenomena, the behavior of polymeric fluids, and foreign language study for engineers and scientists." |
| 1986 | Chen-Ning Yang | "For his pathbreaking research in theoretical physics, which he has influenced for many years by his profound questions and deep mathematical insight. His ideas have had great impact not only on theoretical developments but also on experiments in elementary particles and condensed matter." |
| 1986 | Stanley Norman Cohen | "For his pioneering discovery and characterization of hormone-like growth factors which specifically control the multiplication of certain cells during growth and development." |
| 1979 | Richard P. Feynman | "In recognition of his essential contributions to the quantum theory of radiation and to his illumination of behavior of constituents of the atom, of the atomic nucleus, and of the subnuclear particles." |
| 1979 | Severo Ochoa | "Ochoa continued research on protein synthesis and replication of RNA viruses until 1985, when he returned to Spain and gave advice to Spanish science policy authorities and scientists." |
| 1976 | Edward O. Wilson | "For his pioneering work on the organization of insect societies and the evolution of social behavior among insects and other animals." |
| 1975 | Wernher von Braun | "For his work in making the liquid-fuel rocket a practical launch vehicle and for individual contributions to a series of advanced space vehicles, culminating in the Saturn series that made the Apollo program possible."* |
| 1974 | Kurt Gödel | "For laying the foundation for today's flourishing study of mathematical logic." |
| 1974 | Linus Pauling | "For the extraordinary scope and power of his imagination, which has led to basic contributions in such diverse fields as structural chemistry and the nature of chemical bonding, molecular biology, immunology, and the nature of genetic diseases." |
| 1973 | Carl Djerassi | "In recognition of his major contributions to the elucidation of the complex chemistry of the steroid hormones and to the application of these compounds to medicinal chemistry and population control by means of oral contraceptives." |
| 1973 | Earl Sutherland | "For the discovery that epinephrine and hormones of the pituitary gland occasion their diverse regulatory effects by initiating cellular synthesis of cyclic adenylic acid, now recognized as a universal biological second messenger, which opened a new level of understanding of the subtle mechanisms that integrate the chemical life of the cell while offering hope of entirely new approaches to chemotherapy." |
| 1970 | Barbara McClintock | "For establishing the relations between inherited characters in plants and the detailed shapes of their chromosomes, and for showing that some genes are controlled by other genes within chromosomes." [6] |
| 1970 | John Archibald Wheeler | "For his basic contributions to our understanding of the nuclei of atoms, exemplified by his theory of nuclear fission, and his own work and stimulus to others on basic questions of gravitational and electromagnetic phenomena." |
| 1969 | Ernst Mayr | "For notable contributions to systematics, biogeography, and the study of birds, and especially for great work on the evolution of animal populations." |
| 1969 | B.F. Skinner | "For basic and imaginative contributions to the study of behavior which have had profound influence upon all of psychology and many related areas." |
| 1967 | Paul J. Cohen | "For epoch-making results in mathematical logic which have enlivened and broadened investigations in the foundation of mathematics." |
| 1966 | Claude Shannon | "For brilliant contributions to the mathematical theories of communications and information processing and for his early and continuing impact on the development of these disciplines." |
| 1964 | Harold Urey | "For outstanding contributions to our understanding of the origin and evolution of the solar system and the origin of life on Earth and for pioneering work in the application of isotopes to the determination of the temperatures of ancient oceans." |
| 1963 | Vannevar Bush | "For his distinguished achievements in electrical engineering, in the technology of computing machines, in the effective coupling of the physical and life sciences; and in his mobilizing science, engineering and education in enduring ways in the service of the Nation." |
| 1963 | Norbert Wiener | "For his marvellously versatile contributions, profoundly original, ranging within pure and applied mathematics, and penetrating boldly into the engineering and biological sciences." |