Eric Henry Stoneley Burhop (born January 31, 1911, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia—died January 22, 1980, London, England) was an Australian-born nuclear physicist who made important contributions to the study of elementary particle physics, particularly in connection with K-meson and neutrino research.
A graduate of the Universities of Melbourne and Cambridge, Burhop worked (1933–35) at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge, under Lord Rutherford, returning to Australia as a research physicist and lecturer at Melbourne (1935–45). In 1945 he joined University College, London, and he was reader in physics there from 1950 until becoming professor (1960–78).
During World War II, Burhop worked at the University of California, Berkeley, and at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, on the Manhattan Project to develop an atomic bomb. Burhop was a prominent campaigner for nuclear arms control, East-West detente, and the advancement of international scientific cooperation through membership in the Pugwash movement (of which he was a founder) and as president of the World Federation of Scientific Workers. He was a fellow of the Royal Society from 1963, and he was awarded the Joliot-Curie Medal of the World Peace Council in 1966 and a Lenin Peace Prize in 1972. His publications include The Challenge of Atomic Energy (1951), The Auger Effect (1953), and (with H.S.W. Massey) Electronic and Ionic Impact Phenomena (1953). He also edited High Energy Physics, volumes 1–4 (1967–69).