Nobel physics to three scientists who discovered the invisible universe and another solar system


Stockholm, Ta. October 8, 2019, Tuesday

Sweden's Nobel Prize Committee today announced the Nobel Prize in Physics (Physics). The prize is jointly sponsored by three scientists James Pebbles, Michael Meyer and Didier Quelos. As James Pebbles has expanded his understanding of the universe, Meyer and Quelos have explored the Earth and the sun, orbiting a star orbiting the Earth beyond the Sun.

All three researchers will receive a total of $ 910,000 for this. The distribution of the toy, however, will not be evenly distributed. Half the amount will be paid to Pebble, while the other half will be split between the other two scientists.

The Nobel Committee stated in its official note that Pebbles' research has done a great job of radically changing the concepts of understanding the universe. Pebble has developed a model that can provide evidence of 95 percent of the universe's presence in the invisible.

Scientists know that only 5 percent of what the universe looks like is visible, while the rest is invisible. Pebble's research helps to understand this situation. Also, the understanding of how the universe is expanding after the Big Bang explosion evolves with Pebble's research.

Outside the solar system, there are several planets that look like Earth. These types of planets are called exoplanet. Large-scale work is now under way to find exoplanet. But in 1995, Meyer and Quelozay first introduced the new aspect of the universe to the world, presenting the presence of exoplanets.

He discovered a gigantic gas planet like a Jupiter, orbiting around you like a sun in the middle. The planet was named '51 Pegasi B '. Its size is half that of our master. Since the contributions of both researchers, various scientists have so far discovered over 4000 thousand exoplanets.

Pebbles, 84, is associated with Preston University in the United States, where Albert Einstein was also a professor. The same section is currently handling the Pebbles. The 77-year-old mayor teaches astronomy at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. Quelos, 53, also works at the University of Geneva and the University of Oxford.

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