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Nobel laureates by affiliation [1] Laureate Discipline Year of award Affiliation Daron Acemoglu: Economics 2024 Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Alexei Abrikosov: Physics 2003 Argonne National Laboratory: Edgar Adrian: Physiology or Medicine 1932 University of Cambridge: Pierre Agostini: Physics 2023 Ohio State University: Peter Agre ...
The Nobel Committee nominates about 300 potential laureates from these forms and additional names. The nominees are not publicly named, nor are they told that they are being considered for the prize. All nomination records for a prize are sealed for 50 years from the awarding of the prize.
Thomas W. Butcher, president of Kansas State Teachers College (Emporia State University) (1913–1943) Francisco Santos Calderón, 9th vice president of Colombia; Arthur Linton Corbin (1894), professor at Yale Law School and scholar of contract law; Jonathan M. Davis, 22nd governor of Kansas [4] George Docking (1925), 35th governor of Kansas ...
List of Nobel laureates by university affiliation; List of heads of state and government Nobel laureates; C.
The United States has the highest number of Nobel laureates in the world, with over 420 Nobel laureates. [2] Around 71% of all Nobel Prizes have been awarded to Americans; around 29% of them are immigrants from other nations. [3] U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt was the first American to win a Nobel Prize of any kind, being awarded the Nobel ...
Lists of Nobel laureates cover winners of Nobel Prizes for outstanding contributions for humanity in chemistry, literature, peace, physics, and physiology or medicine. The lists are organized by prize, by ethnicity, by origination and by nationality.
Richard Roberts, the winner of the Nobel in Physiology or Medicine in 1993, told the Times it was the first time in recent memory a group of laureates had gathered to oppose a Cabinet nominee.
Among the 892 Nobel laureates, 48 have been women; the first woman to receive a Nobel Prize was Marie Curie, who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903. [12] She was also the first person (male or female) to be awarded two Nobel Prizes, the second award being the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, given in 1911. [11]