Nobel Prize in Physics for Experiments in Quantum Mechanics in the 1980s

Nobel Prize in Physics for Experiments in Quantum Mechanics in the 1980s

Three physicists from France, the United Kingdom, and the United States Have won The Nobel Prize in Physics. They Receive the Prestigious Prize for Experiments in Quantum Mechanics, which They Conducted in 1984 and 1985.

The Frenchman Michel Devoret, The Briton John Clarke, and the American John Martinis Showed with Their Experiments How Atomic Partles Can Move Through A Barrier That PreviOously Seemed IMEDABLE. This is only Possible with very small amounts of Those Atomic Partles. For Comparonon: a tennis ball, which consists of a large number or particles, bounces back from a barrier like a wall.

Clarke called in by Telephone on Tuesday Morning at the Press Conference Where the Winners Were Announced. “I am completely stunned,” Said the Physicist. “It never occurred to me that could lead to the nobel prize.”

Quantum Technology is Now Used Everywhere, Such As in Technology. “I am speaking to you now via mobile phone, and one of the underlying reasons that a mobile phone works is because of this research,” Clarke explained.

Accordance to the jury, the discoveries of these physicists sacrifice “opportunities to develop the next generation of quantum technology.” This includes quantum computers, which can calculate much faster than regular computers.

Devoret, Clarke, and Martinis Share An Amount of Approximately 1 Million Euros (11 Million Swedish Kronor). They also Receive a Medal and Diploma. The Nobel Prizes Will Be Awarded on December 10. This Week, The Winner of A Category Will Be Announced Every Day.

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