Lectures: 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics
Higgs Boson Discovery Wins Nobel Prize for Physics
2012 Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Nobel Prize Announcement in Physics 2013
Physics Nobel Prize 2011 - Brian Schmidt
2012 Nobel Prize: How Do We See Light?
Peter Higgs - 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics (BBC, 11/10/13)
Albert Einstein The Nobel Prize in Physics 1921
Nobel Prize in Physics 2010 - Sixty Symbols
Physics Nobel Prize 2013: The Moment of the Announcement
Physics Nobel Prize 2012 - Sixty Symbols
Physics Nobel Prize 2013 - Sixty Symbols
Interview: 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics
Nobel Prize in Physics 2009 - Sixty Symbols
Lectures: 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics
Higgs Boson Discovery Wins Nobel Prize for Physics
2012 Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Nobel Prize Announcement in Physics 2013
Physics Nobel Prize 2011 - Brian Schmidt
2012 Nobel Prize: How Do We See Light?
Peter Higgs - 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics (BBC, 11/10/13)
Albert Einstein The Nobel Prize in Physics 1921
Nobel Prize in Physics 2010 - Sixty Symbols
Physics Nobel Prize 2013: The Moment of the Announcement
Physics Nobel Prize 2012 - Sixty Symbols
Physics Nobel Prize 2013 - Sixty Symbols
Interview: 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics
Nobel Prize in Physics 2009 - Sixty Symbols
The Science Behind the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics
Physics Nobel Prize 2011 - Sixty Symbols
Quick look: 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics Announcement
2011 Nobel Prize in Physics
2011 Nobel Prize: Dark Energy feat. Sean Carroll
Interview: The 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics
Nobel Prize Winner Brian Schmidt - Physics 2011
2010 Nobel Prize in Physics Announcement
Holocaust survivor Francois Englert wins 2013 Nobel Prize for Physics: shares award with Peter Higgs
Live: Announcement of the Nobel Prize in Physics 2014
LIVE: Winner of Nobel Prize in Physics 2014 revealed in Stockholm
Nobel Prize in Physics: George F. Smoot
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony 2013
The 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics: Announcement and press conference
2012 Nobel Lectures in Physics
ARIRANG NEWS 20:00 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine won by trio of scientists
Interview with Heinrich Rohrer, Nobel Prize in Physics 1986
Announcement of the Nobel Prize in Physics 2013
Serge Haroche - Nobel Prize in Physics 2012
2012 Nobel Prize in Physics and the coherent control of single quantum systems
Press conference - Nobel Prize in Physics and Chemistry and the Prize in Economic Sciences 2012
NOBEL PRIZE in Physics (R.Amodeo's self-Nomination).wmv
Professors Tom Kibble and Tejinder Virdee speak about the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics
David Wineland 2012 Nobel Prize Winner in Physics
Albert Fert: The Rugby Player Who Got the Nobel Prize
Countdown to the Physics Nobel!
Saul Perlmutter Nobel Prize Press Conference at Berkeley Lab, October 4th, 2011
Talk Vietnam with the 1996 Nobel Laureate for Physics Prof. Douglas Osheroff - Part 1/3
Nobel Laureate in Physics - Dr David J Wineland - Nobel Lecture at Uppsala University
Nobel Physics Prize for LED light inventors
2 Japanese, 1 American win Nobel Prize in physics
Sweden: Nobel Prize in Physics goes to Japanese team for low-energy LED light
2014 Nobel Prize in Phyics: Interview with Per Delsing, Chairman of the Nobel Committee
Invention of blue LEDs receives physics Nobel
The Nobel Prize in Physics 2014 - Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano, Shuji Nakamura
赤崎勇 天野浩 中村修二 ノーベル平和賞 2014 - Nobel Prize in Physics 2014
Nobel Prize for physics is won by trio of Japanese scientists for the invention of blue light LEDs
Medicine Nobel Prize Goes To Trio Of Scientists
Nobel Prize winners 2014
Nobel Prize 2014: Winners in Physics to be announced today
Japanese as 'Rice Growers' in Big Science - Toshihide Maskawa (Nobel Prize in Physics, 2008)
2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine won by trio of scientists
Uncertain Dots Episode 23
Brief details about Dr. Ramamoorthy Ramesh, recommended for this year's Nobel Prize in Physics
Brief details about Dr. Ramamoorthy Ramesh, recommended for this year's Nobel Prize in Physics
2014 Nobel Prize Announcements Trailer
"It was a relief." David J. Gross and Frank Wilczek on being awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize
Public Lecture by David Gross, Nobel Prize Winner 2004, September, 19th. 2014
The Nobel Prize in Physics (Swedish: Nobelpriset i fysik) is awarded once a year by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. It is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895 and awarded since 1901; the others are the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel Peace Prize, and Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. The first Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, a German, "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the remarkable rays (or x-rays)." This award is administered by the Nobel Foundation and widely regarded as the most prestigious award that a scientist can receive in physics. It is presented in Stockholm at an annual ceremony on December 10, the anniversary of Nobel's death.
Alfred Nobel requested in his last will and testament that his money be used to create a series of prizes for those who confer the "greatest benefit on mankind" in physics, chemistry, peace, physiology or medicine, and literature. Though Nobel wrote several wills during his lifetime, the last was written a little over a year before he died, and signed at the Swedish-Norwegian Club in Paris on 27 November 1895. Nobel bequeathed 94% of his total assets, 31 million Swedish kronor (US$186 million in 2008), to establish and endow the five Nobel Prizes. Due to the level of skepticism surrounding the will it was not until April 26, 1897 that it was approved by the Storting (the Norwegian Parliament). The executors of his will were Ragnar Sohlman and Rudolf Lilljequist, who formed the Nobel Foundation to take care of Nobel's fortune and organise the prizes.
The Nobel Prize (Swedish pronunciation: [noˈbɛl], Swedish definite form, singular: Nobelpriset, Norwegian: Nobelprisen) is a set of annual international awards bestowed in a number of categories by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and scientific advances. The will of the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, established the prizes in 1895. The prizes in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace were first awarded in 1901.
The Peace Prize is awarded in Oslo, Norway, while the other prizes are awarded in Stockholm, Sweden. The Nobel Prize is widely regarded as the most prestigious award available in the fields of literature, medicine, physics, chemistry, peace and economics.
In 1968, Sveriges Riksbank instituted an award that is often associated with the Nobel prizes, the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel. The first such prize was awarded in 1969. Although it is not an official Nobel Prize, its announcements and presentations are made along with the other prizes.
Brian P. Schmidt FRS (born February 24, 1967) is a Distinguished Professor, Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow and astrophysicist at The Australian National University Mount Stromlo Observatory and Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics and is known for his research in using supernovae as cosmological probes. He currently holds an Australia Research Council Federation Fellowship and was elected to the Royal Society in 2012. Schmidt shared both the 2006 Shaw Prize in Astronomy and the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics with Saul Perlmutter and Adam Riess for providing evidence that the expansion of the universe is accelerating.
Schmidt, an only child, was born on February 24, 1967, in Missoula, Montana, where his father Dana C. Schmidt was a fisheries biologist. When he was 13, his family relocated to Anchorage, Alaska.
Schmidt attended Bartlett High School in Anchorage, Alaska, and graduated in 1985. He has said that he wanted to be a meteorologist "since I was about five-years-old" but "... I did some work at the USA National Weather Service up in Anchorage and didn't enjoy it very much. It was less scientific, not as exciting as I thought it would be—there was a lot of routine. But I guess I was just a little naive about what being a meteorologist meant." His decision to study astronomy, which he had seen as "a minor pastime", was made just before he enrolled at university. He earned his BS (Physics) and BS (Astronomy) from the University of Arizona in 1989. He received his MA (1992) and then PhD from Harvard University in 1993. Schmidt's PhD thesis was supervised by Robert Kirshner and used Type II Supernovae to measure the Hubble Constant.
Peter Ware Higgs, FRS, FRSE, FKC (born 29 May 1929), is a British theoretical physicist and an emeritus professor at the University of Edinburgh.
He is best known for his 1960s proposal of broken symmetry in electroweak theory, explaining the origin of mass of elementary particles in general and of the W and Z bosons in particular. This so-called Higgs mechanism, which had several inventors besides Higgs at about the same time, predicts the existence of a new particle, the Higgs boson (often described as "the most sought-after particle in modern physics"). Although this particle has not turned up in accelerator experiments so far, the Higgs mechanism is generally accepted as an important ingredient in the Standard Model of particle physics, without which particles would have no mass.
Prof. Higgs has been honoured with a number of awards in recognition of his work, including the 1997 Dirac Medal and Prize for outstanding contributions to theoretical physics from the Institute of Physics, the 1997 High Energy and Particle Physics Prize by the European Physical Society, the 2004 Wolf Prize in Physics, and the 2010 J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics.
Albert Einstein ( /ˈælbərt ˈaɪnstaɪn/; German: [ˈalbɐt ˈaɪnʃtaɪn] (
listen); 14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German theoretical physicist who developed the theory of general relativity, effecting a revolution in physics. For this achievement, Einstein is often regarded as the father of modern physics. While best known for his mass–energy equivalence formula E = mc2 (which has been dubbed "the world's most famous equation"), he received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his services to theoretical physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect". The latter was pivotal in establishing quantum theory within physics.
Near the beginning of his career, Einstein thought that Newtonian mechanics was no longer enough to reconcile the laws of classical mechanics with the laws of the electromagnetic field. This led to the development of his special theory of relativity. He realized, however, that the principle of relativity could also be extended to gravitational fields, and with his subsequent theory of gravitation in 1916, he published a paper on the general theory of relativity. He continued to deal with problems of statistical mechanics and quantum theory, which led to his explanations of particle theory and the motion of molecules. He also investigated the thermal properties of light which laid the foundation of the photon theory of light. In 1917, Einstein applied the general theory of relativity to model the structure of the universe as a whole.