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Interesting facts about the Nobel Prize

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Title: Interesting facts about the Nobel Prize


1
Interesting facts about the Nobel Prize
  • Made by
  • Jacsó Rita
  • Petró Nikolett
  • Báder Renáta

2
Nobel Laureates
Female Nobel Laureates
The youngest and the oldest Nobel Laureates
Laureates who have been awarded more than once
The Nobel Prizes in the same family
The Nobel Prize medals
The Nobel Prize Laureates Park
Why there is no Nobel Prize in Maths?
3
There are 797 Nobel Laureates in the world. 777
individuals and 20 organisations have been
awarded the Nobel Prize. Some laureates and
organisations have been awarded more than once.
4
Only 34 Nobel Laureates have been women and the
remaining 743 were men. 2007 Doris
Lessing Literature 1903 Marie Curie
- Chemistry 2004 Wangari Maathai -
Peace 1979 Mather Tereza Peace 1945
Gabriella Mistral Peace
Mather Tereza
Gabriella Mistral
Wangari Maathai
Doris Lessing
Marie Curie
5
The youngest Laureate is Lawrence Bragg who was
just 25 when he received the nobel Prize in
Physics with his father in 1915. Paul A. M. Dirac
received the Nobel Prize in Physics at the age of
31 in 1933. Care D. Anderson received the Nobel
Prize in Physics at the age of 31 in 1936. The
oldest Laureate is Leonia Hurwicz.She received
the Nobel Prize in Economics when she was 90
years old. Raymond Daris Jr. received the Nobel
Prize in Physics in 2003 and Doris Lessing in
Literature in 2007.Both of them were 88 years
old.
6
Four Nobel Laureates have been forced by
authorities to decline the Nobel Prize. Adolf
Hitler forbade three German Nobel Laureates,
Richard Kuhn, Adolf Butenandt and Gerhord Damagk
accepting the Nobel Prize. All of them could
later receive the Nobel Prize Diploma and Medal,
but not the prize amount. Boris Pasternak the,
1958 Nobel Laureates in Literature, initially
accepted the Prize but was later coerced by the
authorities of the Soviet Union his notive
country to decline.
7
  • Maried Couples
  • Marie Curie
  • Pierre Curie
  • Iréne Joliot Curie
  • Frédéric Joliot
  • Alva Myrdal
  • Gunnar Myrdal
  • Getty Cori
  • Care Cori
  • Brothers
  • Jan Tinbergen
  • Nikolas Tinberge
  • Father and son
  • William Bragg

8
The Nobel Prize medals, which have been minted by
Myntverket in Sweden and the Mint of Norway since
1902, are registered trademarks of the Nobel
Foundation. Their engraved designs are
internationally-recognized symbols of the
prestige of the Nobel Prize. All of these medal
designs feature an image of Alfred Nobel in left
profile on their front sides. Four of the five
Nobel Prize medals feature the same design on
their faces. The Nobel Prize medals in Physics,
Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine and Literature
are identical on the face it shows the image of
Alfred Nobel and the years of his birth and death
(1833-1896). Nobel's portrait also appears on the
Nobel Peace Prize Medal and the Medal for the
Prize in Economics, but with a slightly different
design. All medals made before 1980 were struck
in 23 carat gold. Today, they are made from 18
carat green gold plated with 24 carat gold.
9
The Nobel Prize laureates park can be found on
the yard of Jeno Wigner Grammar School in Eger.
It was founded in 2000, the year of Millenium.The
states werw composed by Pál Farkas and József
Kampfl.The curiosity of the park is that it
commemorates for 4 alive Nobel Prize laureates.
10
One of the most common -and unfounded- reasons as
to why Nobel decided against a Nobel Prize in
maths is that a famous mathematician Gosta
Mittag-Leffler who often claimed to be the guilty
party. The reason as to why there is no Nobel
prize in maths is simply the fact he didn't care
much for mathematics, and that it was not
considered a practical science from which
humanity could benefit. The other reason is that
at the time there existed already a well known
Scandinavian prize for mathematicians. If Nobel
knew about this prize he may have felt less
compelled to add a competing prize for
mathematicians in his will.
11
THE END
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