NSERC Prizes

Prize

NSERC Donna Strickland Prize for Societal Impact of Natural Sciences and Engineering Research

The NSERC Donna Strickland Prize for Societal Impact of Natural Sciences and Engineering Research is awarded annually to an individual or team whose outstanding research, conducted in Canada in the natural sciences and engineering, has led to exceptional benefits for Canadian society, environment and/or economy.

Exceptional benefits can be demonstrated in one or more interacting spheres of Canadian life. Examples include:

  • Improvements to specific procedures in society (e.g., laws, regulations, protocols)
  • Stimulation of new approaches to social issues
  • Improvements to quality of life
  • Informing public debate
  • Improvements to policymaking
  • Reduction of waste and pollution
  • Protection of species
  • Reduction of the impact of pollutants on ecosystems and humans
  • Improvements in the sustainable use of resources
  • Protection of ecosystems
  • Reduction in the impacts of climate change
  • Contributions to economic growth and wealth creation
  • Introduction of a disruptive technology
  • Creation of a new industrial sector

On the morning of October 2, 2018, Dr. Donna Strickland received a phone call that researchers dream of, but never expect: she had been awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics for her research in chirped-pulse amplification. She shared this honour with her graduate supervisor, Dr. Gerard Mourou (University of Michigan), and Dr. Arthur Ashkin (Bell Laboratories).

Dr. Strickland was born on 27 May 1959, in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. She earned a Bachelor of Engineering degree from McMaster University and a PhD in optics from the University of Rochester in New York State. It was at the University of Rochester where she undertook her Nobel Prize-winning work with Dr. Mourou, discovering a method to create ultrashort, extremely high-energy laser pulses that radically transformed the use of lasers.

After graduation, Dr. Strickland was appointed as a Research Associate at the National Research Council of Canada, and later worked as a physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and as a member of the technical staff at Princeton University.

In 1997, Dr. Strickland joined the University of Waterloo as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, where she quickly established an ultrafast laser research group focused on the development of high-intensity laser systems for nonlinear optics.

Over the course of her career, Dr. Strickland received several awards including the Sloan Research Fellowship, Premier’s Research Excellence Award, the Cottrell Scholar Award, and the Golden Plate Award from the American Academy of Achievement. She is a fellow of The Optical Society, the Royal Society of Canada, the Royal Society (United Kingdom), and SPIE (International Society for Optics and Photonics). As well, she is an honorary fellow of both the Canadian Academy of Engineering and the Institute of Physics, and an international member of the National Academy of Sciences.

Today Dr. Strickland is a full professor at the University of Waterloo. She is the first Canadian woman and the third woman ever to be awarded a Nobel Prize in Physics. Her discovery of chirped pulse amplification has profoundly impacted how we use lasers in health care and materials development, and how we understand fundamental physics. Industrial and medical applications of this discovery include cancer treatment, laser eye surgery, the precise machining of materials like the cover glass in smartphones, and ultrafast imaging of molecular processes.

Beyond her outstanding research contributions and societal impacts, Dr. Strickland continues to be recognized for her leadership and passion encouraging young people to enter STEM disciplines and pursue research careers.

The information in this backgrounder was largely drawn from University of Waterloo and Nobel Prize announcements and profiles.

Call for nominations
Current winners
Recent winners
Queen’s UniversityDepartment of Biology

John Smol, Distinguished University Professor of biology and environmental studies at Queen’s University, has dedicated his career to unraveling the secrets hidden within lake and river sediments. His research at the Paleoecological Environmental Assessment and Research Laboratory (PEARL) has…

Université LavalDepartment of civil engineering and water engineering

As climate changes produce more violent storms that damage urban infrastructure, optimal management of urban wastewater during heavy rainfall is becoming increasingly important. Throughout his research career, Professor Peter Vanrolleghem has focused on developing and implementing advanced methods…

Queen’s UniversityDepartment of Civil Engineering

Kerry Rowe, a distinguished Canadian civil engineering researcher at Queen's University, leads the geotechnical engineering charge for improving global environmental safety. His pioneering work on landfill barrier systems and more recently on mine waste is having a profound effect in ensuring long…

2025|Beth Parker
University of Guelph-College of Engineering
2025|Xiaoyi Bao
University of Ottawa-Department of Physics
2024|John Smol
Queen’s University-Department of Biology
2023|Peter Vanrolleghem
Université Laval-Department of civil engineering and water engineering
2022|Kerry Rowe
Queen’s University-Department of Civil Engineering

If you have any questions about this program, please email us at strickland@nserc-crsng.gc.ca.