Sergei Odintsov, at the Institute of Space Sciences (IEEC-CSIC), among the most cited researchers in the world for the third consecutive year [NOT TRANSLATED]

2016-11-23 00:00:00
Sergei Odintsov, at the Institute of Space Sciences (IEEC-CSIC), among the most cited researchers in the world for the third consecutive year
Sergei Odintsov, ICREA researcher at the Institute of Space Sciences (IEEC-CSIC), has been selected as one of the most cited researchers in the world, according to the recently released Highly Cited Researchers report from Thomson Reuters. This is the third consecutive year that Odintsov forms part of this list in the Physics category.

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The Hihghly Cited Researchers Report by Thomson Reuters is an annual list that recognizes top researchers in the sciences and social sciences around the world. The list develops taking into account the number of total citations that have received the articles indexed in Web of Science Core Collection in the period from 2004 to 2014. The list includes those researchers with the highest number of articles among the 1% most cited in his/her field of research and year of publication.

The list includes the world’s 3,000 most prominent names from 21 fields of science and social sciences, ranging from clinical medicine and neuroscience to agriculture, economics and physics. Of these, 56 are researchers working in Spanish institutions.

Sergei Odintsov is an ICREA astrophysicist at ICE (IEEC-CSIC) since 2003. His research focuses on cosmology, astrophysics, the experimental sciences of gravity and mathematics. He is the author or co-author of more than 500 articles in research journals (with more than 28,000 citations). Its main objective is to formulate a coherent alternative to Einstein’s gravity in order to solve the fundamental puzzle of modern cosmology: how and why does the Universe accelerate?

He is a foreign member of the Norwegian Royal Academy and the European Society of Physics, among others. In 2011, he was chosen by Forbes magazine as one of the ten most influential Russian scientists in the world and last year he was awarded the Amaldi Medal: European Prize in Gravitational Physics. [NOT TRANSLATED]

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