- 2018: Patrick Duran of University at Albany, SUNY, won the Max Eaton Award at the 2018 Conference on Hurricanes and Tropical Meteorology for his study Upper-Tropospheric Static Stability in Tropical Cyclones: Observations and Modeling
- 2018: Erik Nielsen of Colorado State University won a Student Poster Presentation award at the 2018 Conference on Weather Analysis and Forecasting for his study Dynamical Insights into Extreme Short-Term Precipitation Associated with Supercells and Mesovortices.
- 2016: Tristan Kading of University of Connecticut won a Student Poster Presentation award at the 2016 Conference on Severe Local Storms for his study Simulated Interaction of an Idealized Squall Line with a Cool Marine Atmospheric Boundary Layer.
- 2014: Eli Dennis of Penn State won the Best Student Poster Presentation award at the 2014 Severe Local Storms Conference for his study The impact of hodograph shape on hail production in simulated supercell storms.
- 2012: Ryan Hastings of Penn State won Best Student Poster Presentation for Mergers in supercell environments. Part II: Tornadogenesis potential during merger as evaluated by changes in the near-surface low-level mesocyclone.
- 2012: Daniel Chavas of MIT won the 2012 Max Eaton Prize from the AMS for his paper, Equilibrium tropical cyclone size in an idealized state of axisymmetric radiative-convective equilibrium.
- 2010: George Bryan and Richard Rotunno were awarded the Banner I. Miller Award by the AMS for their article "The maximum intensity of tropical cyclones in axisymmetric numerical model simulations".
- 2009: An analysis of a supercell thunderstorm by Leigh Orf of Central Michigan University was selected for the cover of the Coalition for Academic Scientific Computation's 2010 brochure.
- 2008: Casey Letkewicz of the Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences at North Carolina State University won the Best Student Poster award at the 24th Conference on Severe Local Storms for her studies of simulated mesoscale convective systems crossing the Appalachian Mountains.
- 2008: Chris Nowotarski of the Department of Meteorology at The Pennsylvania State University won the Best Student Oral Presentation award at the 24th Conference on Severe Local Storms for his study of numerically simulated supercells in varying low-level environmental stability.
(Please contact George Bryan if you have something to add to this list.)