Nobel Prize winners in science represent the pinnacle of human achievement in Physics, Chemistry, and Physiology or Medicine — and their discoveries are among the most tested topics in competitive exam Science and Technology sections.
From Marie Curie's double Nobel to India's C.V. Raman and recent breakthroughs in AI (2024 Nobel in Physics for neural networks) and mRNA vaccines (2023 Nobel in Medicine), the Nobel Prizes track the biggest advances in human knowledge. Questions on laureate names, years, nationalities, and discoveries appear in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, Railways, and State PSC exams every year.
⚡ Quick Facts
- Nobel Prizes established by Alfred Nobel in his will (1895); first awarded 1901. Prizes given on December 10 (Nobel's death anniversary).
- Marie Curie is the only person to win Nobels in two different sciences — Physics (1903) and Chemistry (1911); only woman to win in both categories.
- C.V. Raman (Physics 1930) is the only Indian citizen to win a Nobel in a natural science — discovery of the Raman Effect; National Science Day = February 28.
- The 2024 Nobel in Physics (Hopfield & Hinton) was the first ever Nobel for AI/machine learning research; 2024 Nobel in Chemistry (AlphaFold) was also AI-related.
- The 2023 Nobel in Medicine (Karikó & Weissman) was for mRNA vaccine technology — the foundation of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines.
Einstein did NOT win Nobel for Relativity — he won for the photoelectric effect (Physics 1921). Also: C.V. Raman won in Physics, NOT Chemistry. And: Several scientists of Indian origin won Nobels (Chandrasekhar, Ramakrishnan, Khorana) but were foreign citizens at the time — C.V. Raman alone was an Indian citizen. Tagore (Literature 1913) = first Asian Nobel; first Indian Nobel — not C.V. Raman.
✅ My Progress Tracker
🏆 Nobel Prize Winners in Science — Complete List
| Year ↕ | Prize ↕ | Laureate(s) ↕ | Country | Discovery / Work | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Physics | John J. Hopfield + Geoffrey E. Hinton | USA / Canada-UK | Foundational discoveries enabling machine learning with artificial neural networks | First AI/ML Nobel in Physics; Hinton = "Godfather of AI"; left Google in 2023 (year before Nobel) to speak freely about AI risks |
| 2024 | Chemistry | David Baker + Demis Hassabis + John M. Jumper | USA / UK | Computational protein design; AI prediction of protein structures (AlphaFold) | AlphaFold = AI predicts protein structure; Hassabis = DeepMind founder; both 2024 Nobels are AI-related |
| 2024 | Medicine | Victor Ambros + Gary Ruvkun | USA | Discovery of microRNA and its role in post-transcriptional gene regulation | microRNA; discovered in C. elegans; post-transcriptional gene regulation |
| 2023 | Physics | Agostini + Krausz + L'Huillier | France / Hungary-DE / Sweden | Experimental methods generating attosecond pulses of light to study electron dynamics | Attosecond science; ultrafast light pulses; studying electrons in motion |
| 2023 | Chemistry | Bawendi + Brus + Ekimov | USA / Russia-USA | Discovery and synthesis of quantum dots | Quantum dots = semiconductor nanocrystals; used in QLED TVs and medical imaging |
| 2023 | Medicine | Katalin Karikó + Drew Weissman | Hungary-USA / USA | Nucleoside base modifications enabling effective mRNA vaccines | mRNA vaccine technology; directly enabled Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines |
| 2022 | Physics | Aspect + Clauser + Zeilinger | France / USA / Austria | Experiments with entangled photons; Bell inequalities violations; quantum information | Quantum entanglement confirmed; foundation for quantum computing and quantum cryptography |
| 2022 | Chemistry | Bertozzi + Meldal + Sharpless | USA / Denmark / USA | Development of click chemistry and bioorthogonal chemistry | Click chemistry; Sharpless won his 2nd Chemistry Nobel (also won 2001) |
| 2022 | Medicine | Svante Pääbo | Sweden-Germany | Discoveries concerning genomes of extinct hominins and human evolution | Neanderthal and Denisovan genomes; paleogenomics; ancient DNA sequencing |
| 2021 | Physics | Manabe + Hasselmann + Parisi | Japan-USA / Germany / Italy | Physical modelling of Earth's climate; prediction of global warming; complex systems | Climate science gets Physics Nobel; global warming modelling — landmark recognition |
| 2021 | Chemistry | List + MacMillan | Germany / UK-USA | Development of asymmetric organocatalysis | Organocatalysis; cleaner drug manufacturing; green chemistry applications |
| 2021 | Medicine | Julius + Patapoutian | USA | Discoveries of receptors for temperature and touch (TRPV1; mechanoreceptors) | How we feel hot, cold, and pressure; pain research; TRPV1 capsaicin receptor |
| 2020 | Physics | Penrose + Genzel + Ghez | UK / Germany / USA | Black hole formation from general relativity; supermassive compact object at Milky Way centre | Black holes; Sagittarius A* at Milky Way centre confirmed; Ghez = 4th woman Physics Nobel |
| 2020 | Chemistry | Charpentier + Doudna | France / USA | Development of a method for genome editing — CRISPR-Cas9 | CRISPR gene editing; revolutionary biotech; first all-female Chemistry Nobel |
| 2020 | Medicine | Alter + Houghton + Rice | USA / UK-Canada / USA | Discovery of Hepatitis C virus | Hepatitis C virus identification; blood-borne hepatitis; cure is now possible |
| 2019 | Physics | Peebles + Mayor + Queloz | Canada-USA / Switzerland | Theoretical cosmology; discovery of first exoplanet orbiting a solar-type star | First exoplanet around solar-type star confirmed; cosmology; Big Bang |
| 2019 | Chemistry | Goodenough + Whittingham + Yoshino | USA / UK-USA / Japan | Development of lithium-ion batteries | Li-ion batteries; mobile phones, EVs; Goodenough = oldest Nobel laureate at age 97 |
| 2019 | Medicine | Kaelin + Ratcliffe + Semenza | USA / UK / USA | How cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability; HIFs (Hypoxia-Inducible Factors) | Oxygen sensing; HIFs; cancer and anaemia research applications |
| 2018 | Physics | Ashkin + Mourou + Strickland | USA / France / Canada | Optical tweezers; method generating high-intensity ultra-short optical pulses | Strickland = 3rd woman to win Physics Nobel; optical tweezers trap living cells |
| 2018 | Chemistry | Arnold + Smith + Winter | USA / USA / UK | Directed evolution of enzymes; phage display of peptides and antibodies | Directed evolution; Frances Arnold = 5th woman in Chemistry Nobel |
| 2018 | Medicine | Allison + Honjo | USA / Japan | Cancer therapy by inhibition of negative immune regulation (checkpoint inhibitors) | Cancer immunotherapy revolution; PD-1 and CTLA-4 pathways; immuno-oncology |
| 2017 | Physics | Weiss + Barish + Thorne | USA | LIGO detector; observation of gravitational waves | Gravitational waves first detected 2015; Einstein's 1915 prediction confirmed 100 years later |
| 2017 | Chemistry | Dubochet + Frank + Henderson | Switzerland / USA / UK | Cryo-electron microscopy for high-resolution structure determination of biomolecules | Cryo-EM; protein structure visualisation without crystallisation |
| 2017 | Medicine | Hall + Rosbash + Young | USA | Molecular mechanisms controlling circadian rhythm | Body clock / circadian biology; sleep-wake cycle molecular basis |
| 2016 | Physics | Thouless + Haldane + Kosterlitz | UK-USA | Theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter | Topology in condensed matter physics; exotic states of matter |
| 2016 | Chemistry | Sauvage + Stoddart + Feringa | France / UK-USA / Netherlands | Design and synthesis of molecular machines | Molecular machines; nanoscale mechanical devices; world's smallest machines |
| 2016 | Medicine | Yoshinori Ohsumi | Japan | Discoveries of mechanisms for autophagy | Autophagy = cellular self-cleaning mechanism; recycling of cellular components |
| 2015 | Physics | Kajita + McDonald | Japan / Canada | Discovery of neutrino oscillations — proving neutrinos have mass | Neutrino has mass; particle physics; contradicted earlier assumption |
| 2015 | Chemistry | Lindahl + Modrich + Sancar | Sweden-UK / USA / Turkey-USA | Mechanistic studies of DNA repair | DNA repair mechanisms; key to understanding cancer and mutagenesis |
| 2015 | Medicine | Campbell + Ōmura + Tu Youyou | Ireland-USA / Japan / China | Therapies against roundworm (Avermectin) and malaria (Artemisinin) | Tu Youyou = first Chinese woman to win Nobel; Artemisinin revolutionised malaria treatment |
| 1901 | Physics | Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen | Germany | Discovery of X-rays | First ever Nobel Prize in Physics (and first Nobel in any category) |
| 1903 | Physics | Marie Curie (+Pierre Curie +Becquerel) | Poland-France | Research on radiation / radioactivity | First woman to win Nobel Prize (any category); later won Chemistry 1911 too |
| 1911 | Chemistry | Marie Curie | Poland-France | Discovery of elements radium and polonium | Only person to win Nobel in two different sciences (Physics 1903 + Chemistry 1911) |
| 1921 | Physics | Albert Einstein | Germany | Discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect | Classic exam trap — NOT for Relativity; prize delayed to 1922; awarded in absentia |
| 1930 | Physics | C.V. Raman | India | Discovery of the Raman Effect (inelastic scattering of light) | Only Indian citizen to win Nobel in natural science; National Science Day = Feb 28 |
| 1945 | Medicine | Alexander Fleming (+Florey +Chain) | UK | Discovery of penicillin | Antibiotic revolution; saved hundreds of millions of lives |
| 1962 | Medicine | Crick + Watson + Wilkins | UK / USA | DNA double helix structure | Rosalind Franklin's key X-ray data used but she died before award (Nobel not given posthumously) |
| 2013 | Physics | Peter Higgs + François Englert | UK / Belgium | Theoretical existence of the Higgs boson | Higgs boson = "God particle"; theorised 1964; confirmed at CERN in 2012 |
| 1913 | Literature | Rabindranath Tagore | India | Gitanjali; contribution to world literature | First Asian to win Nobel Prize; first Indian Nobel laureate (any category) |
| 1983 | Physics | Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar | India-origin (US citizen) | Theoretical studies of physical processes in stellar evolution; Chandrasekhar Limit | Chandrasekhar Limit = max mass of white dwarf; of Indian origin but US citizen at award |
| 2009 | Chemistry | Venkatraman Ramakrishnan | India-origin (British citizen) | Studies of the structure and function of the ribosome | Tamil Nadu origin; British citizen; President of Royal Society (2015–20); of Indian origin |
| 2019 | Economics | Abhijit Banerjee | India-origin (US citizen) | Experimental approach to alleviating global poverty | Indian-American; MIT; shared with Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer; of Indian origin |
| # | Name | Prize | Year | For | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rabindranath Tagore | Literature | 1913 | Gitanjali | First Asian Nobel Prize winner; first Indian Nobel laureate |
| 2 | C.V. Raman | Physics | 1930 | Raman Effect (inelastic scattering of light) | Only Indian citizen to win Nobel in a natural science; National Science Day = Feb 28 |
| 3 | Har Gobind Khorana | Medicine | 1968 | Genetic code and protein synthesis | Indian-origin; born Raipur (now Pakistan); US citizen at award |
| 4 | Mother Teresa | Peace | 1979 | Work with the poor and dying in Calcutta | Born in Albania; adopted Indian citizenship; Missionaries of Charity |
| 5 | Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar | Physics | 1983 | Stellar evolution; Chandrasekhar Limit | Indian-origin; US citizen; Chandrasekhar Limit = max mass of white dwarf |
| 6 | Amartya Sen | Economics | 1998 | Welfare economics; capability approach; poverty | Indian citizen; Trinity College Cambridge; Harvard; "Development as Freedom" |
| 7 | V.S. Naipaul | Literature | 2001 | Perceptive narrative; investigative literature | Trinidad-born; of Indian descent; British citizen |
| 8 | Venkatraman Ramakrishnan | Chemistry | 2009 | Structure and function of the ribosome | Tamil Nadu origin; British-American; President of Royal Society (2015–20) |
| 9 | Kailash Satyarthi | Peace | 2014 | Children's rights; anti-child labour | Indian citizen; Bachpan Bachao Andolan; shared with Malala Yousafzai |
| 10 | Abhijit Banerjee | Economics | 2019 | Experimental approach to alleviating poverty | Indian-origin; MIT; US citizen; shared with Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer |
| Record | Laureate | Year | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Nobel Prize ever | Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (Physics) | 1901 | Discovery of X-rays; first Nobel in any category |
| First woman Nobel laureate | Marie Curie (Physics) | 1903 | Also won Chemistry 1911 — only person to win in two sciences |
| First Asian Nobel laureate | Rabindranath Tagore (Literature) | 1913 | Also first Indian Nobel laureate |
| Only Indian citizen — natural science | C.V. Raman (Physics) | 1930 | Raman Effect; National Science Day = Feb 28 |
| Most Nobel Prizes by one person | Marie Curie | 1903 + 1911 | Physics + Chemistry; only person with two science Nobels |
| First all-female Nobel (Chemistry) | Charpentier + Doudna | 2020 | CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing |
| Oldest Nobel laureate | John B. Goodenough (Chemistry) | 2019 | Won at age 97 for lithium-ion batteries |
| Classic exam trap | Albert Einstein (Physics) | 1921 | Won for photoelectric effect, NOT Relativity |
| First AI/ML Nobel | Hinton + Hopfield (Physics) | 2024 | Artificial neural networks enabling machine learning |
| First Chinese woman Nobel | Tu Youyou (Medicine) | 2015 | Artemisinin for malaria; no university degree, PhD, or overseas training |
⚖️ Compare Two Laureates
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833–1896) was a Swedish chemist and inventor who made his fortune from dynamite (1867). Troubled by how his inventions were used in warfare, he left his entire estate to award annual prizes to those who "conferred the greatest benefit to humankind" in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace. First prizes: 1901. Prizes awarded on December 10 — Nobel's death anniversary. Nobel Economics Prize added in 1968 by Sweden's central bank.
The Raman Effect, discovered on February 28, 1928, describes the inelastic scattering of photons — when light interacts with a molecule, a small fraction changes its wavelength, revealing molecular structure. C.V. Raman won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics. February 28 = National Science Day in India. Raman was the first Asian to win a Nobel in science and funded the research himself after European colleagues doubted his hypothesis.
2023 Medicine: Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman for mRNA vaccine technology (nucleoside base modifications) — directly enabled Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines; Karikó worked on this for 25 years despite being demoted. 2024 Physics: Hinton and Hopfield — first ever Nobel for AI/machine learning; Hinton left Google months before to warn about AI safety risks. 2024 Chemistry: AlphaFold (Hassabis) — AI predicts protein structures, also AI-related. Both 2024 Nobels were AI-connected.
C.V. Raman (Physics 1930) = only Indian citizen Nobel in natural science. Indian-origin but foreign citizens: Khorana (Medicine 1968, US), Chandrasekhar (Physics 1983, US), Ramakrishnan (Chemistry 2009, British), Banerjee (Economics 2019, US). Indian citizens with non-science Nobels: Tagore (Literature 1913 — first Asian Nobel), Mother Teresa (Peace 1979 — Albanian-born Indian citizen), Amartya Sen (Economics 1998), Kailash Satyarthi (Peace 2014).
Einstein did NOT win the Nobel Prize for the Theory of Relativity. He won the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect — explaining how light (photons) causes electrons to be ejected from metal surfaces, foundational for quantum theory. The prize was delayed to 1922 and given in absentia. His Relativity theories (Special 1905, General 1915), though transformative, were considered too theoretical and controversial for the Nobel Committee at the time.
Indian Nobel in natural science:
"Only CV Raman — 1930 — Physics — Raman Effect — National Science Day Feb 28"
→ CV Raman is THE answer; others (Chandrasekhar, Ramakrishnan, Khorana) = Indian origin, foreign citizens
Classic Nobel science traps:
"Einstein = Photoelectric Effect (NOT Relativity) | Curie = Physics AND Chemistry | Raman = Physics (NOT Chemistry)"
2020s Nobel Science highlights:
"2020 = CRISPR (Chem) | 2023 = mRNA vaccines (Med) | 2024 = AI/neural networks (Phys) + AlphaFold (Chem)"
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Albert Einstein won the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect — not for his theories of relativity. The photoelectric effect explained how light (photons) striking a metal surface ejects electrons, foundational for quantum mechanics. This is one of the most classic exam traps — students automatically think "relativity" but the correct answer is "photoelectric effect."
The Raman Effect (discovered February 28, 1928) describes the inelastic scattering of photons — when light interacts with a molecule, a small fraction changes wavelength, revealing information about molecular structure. C.V. Raman won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics for this discovery, making him the only Indian citizen to win a Nobel in a natural science. February 28 is celebrated as National Science Day in India.
The 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman for their discoveries concerning nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of effective mRNA vaccines. This technology directly enabled the Pfizer-BioNTech (BNT162b2) and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines — the most rapidly developed vaccines in history.
Marie Curie won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903 (shared with her husband Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel) for research on radiation, and the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911 for the discovery of the elements radium and polonium. She is the only person to win Nobels in two different scientific disciplines and remains the only woman to have won in both Physics and Chemistry.
The 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton for foundational discoveries enabling machine learning using artificial neural networks — the first time artificial intelligence and machine learning research received the Nobel Prize in Physics. Geoffrey Hinton — often called the "Godfather of AI" — had left Google earlier in 2024, citing concerns about AI safety risks.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
The Nobel Prize was established by Swedish chemist, inventor, and industrialist Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833–1896), who made his fortune inventing dynamite in 1867. In his will of 1895, he directed that his estate be used to award annual prizes to those who conferred the greatest benefit to humankind in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace. The first Nobel Prizes were awarded in 1901 — the 125th anniversary falls in 2026. The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics was added later in 1968. Prizes are awarded on December 10, the anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death.
C.V. Raman (Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman) is the only Indian citizen to win a Nobel Prize in a natural science. He won the Physics Nobel in 1930 for the discovery of the Raman Effect — the inelastic scattering of photons by molecules. His discovery was made on February 28, 1928, which is now celebrated as National Science Day in India. Several other scientists of Indian origin have won Nobel Prizes in science, but they were foreign citizens at the time — including Har Gobind Khorana (Medicine 1968, US citizen), Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (Physics 1983, US citizen), Venkatraman Ramakrishnan (Chemistry 2009, British citizen), and Abhijit Banerjee (Economics 2019, US citizen).
The 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to John J. Hopfield and Geoffrey E. Hinton for their foundational discoveries enabling machine learning using artificial neural networks — the first time AI and machine learning research has been recognised with a Nobel in Physics. Geoffrey Hinton, often called the "Godfather of AI," had resigned from Google in May 2023 to speak freely about AI safety risks. John Hopfield developed the Hopfield Network (1982), a recurrent neural network. Hinton pioneered deep learning methods. Their work laid the mathematical foundations for modern AI systems.
Nobel Prize winners appear in UPSC Prelims (Science and Technology), SSC CGL, Bank PO, and Railway exams through multiple patterns: the current year's winners (Physics, Chemistry, Medicine), landmark past winners (Einstein, Curie, Fleming, Watson-Crick), Indian Nobel laureates (C.V. Raman for science), notable firsts (first Nobel 1901, first woman Marie Curie, first Asian Tagore 1913), and classic exam traps (Einstein for photoelectric effect not relativity). The most recent Nobels (2023 mRNA vaccines, 2024 AI/neural networks and AlphaFold) are particularly high-frequency in Banking, SSC, and UPSC current affairs for 2025–26 exams.
Nobel Prize winners in science represent the pinnacle of human achievement in Physics, Chemistry, and Physiology or Medicine — and their discoveries are among the most tested topics in competitive exam Science and Technology sections.
From Marie Curie's double Nobel to India's C.V. Raman and recent breakthroughs in AI (2024 Nobel in Physics for neural networks) and mRNA vaccines (2023 Nobel in Medicine), the Nobel Prizes track the biggest advances in human knowledge. Questions on laureate names, years, nationalities, and discoveries appear in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, Railways, and State PSC exams every year.
⚡ Quick Facts
- Nobel Prizes established by Alfred Nobel in his will (1895); first awarded 1901. Prizes given on December 10 (Nobel's death anniversary).
- Marie Curie is the only person to win Nobels in two different sciences — Physics (1903) and Chemistry (1911); only woman to win in both categories.
- C.V. Raman (Physics 1930) is the only Indian citizen to win a Nobel in a natural science — discovery of the Raman Effect; National Science Day = February 28.
- The 2024 Nobel in Physics (Hopfield & Hinton) was the first ever Nobel for AI/machine learning research; 2024 Nobel in Chemistry (AlphaFold) was also AI-related.
- The 2023 Nobel in Medicine (Karikó & Weissman) was for mRNA vaccine technology — the foundation of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines.
Einstein did NOT win Nobel for Relativity — he won for the photoelectric effect (Physics 1921). Also: C.V. Raman won in Physics, NOT Chemistry. And: Several scientists of Indian origin won Nobels (Chandrasekhar, Ramakrishnan, Khorana) but were foreign citizens at the time — C.V. Raman alone was an Indian citizen. Tagore (Literature 1913) = first Asian Nobel; first Indian Nobel — not C.V. Raman.
✅ My Progress Tracker
🏆 Nobel Prize Winners in Science — Complete List
| Year ↕ | Prize ↕ | Laureate(s) ↕ | Country | Discovery / Work | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Physics | John J. Hopfield + Geoffrey E. Hinton | USA / Canada-UK | Foundational discoveries enabling machine learning with artificial neural networks | First AI/ML Nobel in Physics; Hinton = "Godfather of AI"; left Google in 2023 (year before Nobel) to speak freely about AI risks |
| 2024 | Chemistry | David Baker + Demis Hassabis + John M. Jumper | USA / UK | Computational protein design; AI prediction of protein structures (AlphaFold) | AlphaFold = AI predicts protein structure; Hassabis = DeepMind founder; both 2024 Nobels are AI-related |
| 2024 | Medicine | Victor Ambros + Gary Ruvkun | USA | Discovery of microRNA and its role in post-transcriptional gene regulation | microRNA; discovered in C. elegans; post-transcriptional gene regulation |
| 2023 | Physics | Agostini + Krausz + L'Huillier | France / Hungary-DE / Sweden | Experimental methods generating attosecond pulses of light to study electron dynamics | Attosecond science; ultrafast light pulses; studying electrons in motion |
| 2023 | Chemistry | Bawendi + Brus + Ekimov | USA / Russia-USA | Discovery and synthesis of quantum dots | Quantum dots = semiconductor nanocrystals; used in QLED TVs and medical imaging |
| 2023 | Medicine | Katalin Karikó + Drew Weissman | Hungary-USA / USA | Nucleoside base modifications enabling effective mRNA vaccines | mRNA vaccine technology; directly enabled Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines |
| 2022 | Physics | Aspect + Clauser + Zeilinger | France / USA / Austria | Experiments with entangled photons; Bell inequalities violations; quantum information | Quantum entanglement confirmed; foundation for quantum computing and quantum cryptography |
| 2022 | Chemistry | Bertozzi + Meldal + Sharpless | USA / Denmark / USA | Development of click chemistry and bioorthogonal chemistry | Click chemistry; Sharpless won his 2nd Chemistry Nobel (also won 2001) |
| 2022 | Medicine | Svante Pääbo | Sweden-Germany | Discoveries concerning genomes of extinct hominins and human evolution | Neanderthal and Denisovan genomes; paleogenomics; ancient DNA sequencing |
| 2021 | Physics | Manabe + Hasselmann + Parisi | Japan-USA / Germany / Italy | Physical modelling of Earth's climate; prediction of global warming; complex systems | Climate science gets Physics Nobel; global warming modelling — landmark recognition |
| 2021 | Chemistry | List + MacMillan | Germany / UK-USA | Development of asymmetric organocatalysis | Organocatalysis; cleaner drug manufacturing; green chemistry applications |
| 2021 | Medicine | Julius + Patapoutian | USA | Discoveries of receptors for temperature and touch (TRPV1; mechanoreceptors) | How we feel hot, cold, and pressure; pain research; TRPV1 capsaicin receptor |
| 2020 | Physics | Penrose + Genzel + Ghez | UK / Germany / USA | Black hole formation from general relativity; supermassive compact object at Milky Way centre | Black holes; Sagittarius A* at Milky Way centre confirmed; Ghez = 4th woman Physics Nobel |
| 2020 | Chemistry | Charpentier + Doudna | France / USA | Development of a method for genome editing — CRISPR-Cas9 | CRISPR gene editing; revolutionary biotech; first all-female Chemistry Nobel |
| 2020 | Medicine | Alter + Houghton + Rice | USA / UK-Canada / USA | Discovery of Hepatitis C virus | Hepatitis C virus identification; blood-borne hepatitis; cure is now possible |
| 2019 | Physics | Peebles + Mayor + Queloz | Canada-USA / Switzerland | Theoretical cosmology; discovery of first exoplanet orbiting a solar-type star | First exoplanet around solar-type star confirmed; cosmology; Big Bang |
| 2019 | Chemistry | Goodenough + Whittingham + Yoshino | USA / UK-USA / Japan | Development of lithium-ion batteries | Li-ion batteries; mobile phones, EVs; Goodenough = oldest Nobel laureate at age 97 |
| 2019 | Medicine | Kaelin + Ratcliffe + Semenza | USA / UK / USA | How cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability; HIFs (Hypoxia-Inducible Factors) | Oxygen sensing; HIFs; cancer and anaemia research applications |
| 2018 | Physics | Ashkin + Mourou + Strickland | USA / France / Canada | Optical tweezers; method generating high-intensity ultra-short optical pulses | Strickland = 3rd woman to win Physics Nobel; optical tweezers trap living cells |
| 2018 | Chemistry | Arnold + Smith + Winter | USA / USA / UK | Directed evolution of enzymes; phage display of peptides and antibodies | Directed evolution; Frances Arnold = 5th woman in Chemistry Nobel |
| 2018 | Medicine | Allison + Honjo | USA / Japan | Cancer therapy by inhibition of negative immune regulation (checkpoint inhibitors) | Cancer immunotherapy revolution; PD-1 and CTLA-4 pathways; immuno-oncology |
| 2017 | Physics | Weiss + Barish + Thorne | USA | LIGO detector; observation of gravitational waves | Gravitational waves first detected 2015; Einstein's 1915 prediction confirmed 100 years later |
| 2017 | Chemistry | Dubochet + Frank + Henderson | Switzerland / USA / UK | Cryo-electron microscopy for high-resolution structure determination of biomolecules | Cryo-EM; protein structure visualisation without crystallisation |
| 2017 | Medicine | Hall + Rosbash + Young | USA | Molecular mechanisms controlling circadian rhythm | Body clock / circadian biology; sleep-wake cycle molecular basis |
| 2016 | Physics | Thouless + Haldane + Kosterlitz | UK-USA | Theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter | Topology in condensed matter physics; exotic states of matter |
| 2016 | Chemistry | Sauvage + Stoddart + Feringa | France / UK-USA / Netherlands | Design and synthesis of molecular machines | Molecular machines; nanoscale mechanical devices; world's smallest machines |
| 2016 | Medicine | Yoshinori Ohsumi | Japan | Discoveries of mechanisms for autophagy | Autophagy = cellular self-cleaning mechanism; recycling of cellular components |
| 2015 | Physics | Kajita + McDonald | Japan / Canada | Discovery of neutrino oscillations — proving neutrinos have mass | Neutrino has mass; particle physics; contradicted earlier assumption |
| 2015 | Chemistry | Lindahl + Modrich + Sancar | Sweden-UK / USA / Turkey-USA | Mechanistic studies of DNA repair | DNA repair mechanisms; key to understanding cancer and mutagenesis |
| 2015 | Medicine | Campbell + Ōmura + Tu Youyou | Ireland-USA / Japan / China | Therapies against roundworm (Avermectin) and malaria (Artemisinin) | Tu Youyou = first Chinese woman to win Nobel; Artemisinin revolutionised malaria treatment |
| 1901 | Physics | Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen | Germany | Discovery of X-rays | First ever Nobel Prize in Physics (and first Nobel in any category) |
| 1903 | Physics | Marie Curie (+Pierre Curie +Becquerel) | Poland-France | Research on radiation / radioactivity | First woman to win Nobel Prize (any category); later won Chemistry 1911 too |
| 1911 | Chemistry | Marie Curie | Poland-France | Discovery of elements radium and polonium | Only person to win Nobel in two different sciences (Physics 1903 + Chemistry 1911) |
| 1921 | Physics | Albert Einstein | Germany | Discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect | Classic exam trap — NOT for Relativity; prize delayed to 1922; awarded in absentia |
| 1930 | Physics | C.V. Raman | India | Discovery of the Raman Effect (inelastic scattering of light) | Only Indian citizen to win Nobel in natural science; National Science Day = Feb 28 |
| 1945 | Medicine | Alexander Fleming (+Florey +Chain) | UK | Discovery of penicillin | Antibiotic revolution; saved hundreds of millions of lives |
| 1962 | Medicine | Crick + Watson + Wilkins | UK / USA | DNA double helix structure | Rosalind Franklin's key X-ray data used but she died before award (Nobel not given posthumously) |
| 2013 | Physics | Peter Higgs + François Englert | UK / Belgium | Theoretical existence of the Higgs boson | Higgs boson = "God particle"; theorised 1964; confirmed at CERN in 2012 |
| 1913 | Literature | Rabindranath Tagore | India | Gitanjali; contribution to world literature | First Asian to win Nobel Prize; first Indian Nobel laureate (any category) |
| 1983 | Physics | Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar | India-origin (US citizen) | Theoretical studies of physical processes in stellar evolution; Chandrasekhar Limit | Chandrasekhar Limit = max mass of white dwarf; of Indian origin but US citizen at award |
| 2009 | Chemistry | Venkatraman Ramakrishnan | India-origin (British citizen) | Studies of the structure and function of the ribosome | Tamil Nadu origin; British citizen; President of Royal Society (2015–20); of Indian origin |
| 2019 | Economics | Abhijit Banerjee | India-origin (US citizen) | Experimental approach to alleviating global poverty | Indian-American; MIT; shared with Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer; of Indian origin |
| # | Name | Prize | Year | For | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rabindranath Tagore | Literature | 1913 | Gitanjali | First Asian Nobel Prize winner; first Indian Nobel laureate |
| 2 | C.V. Raman | Physics | 1930 | Raman Effect (inelastic scattering of light) | Only Indian citizen to win Nobel in a natural science; National Science Day = Feb 28 |
| 3 | Har Gobind Khorana | Medicine | 1968 | Genetic code and protein synthesis | Indian-origin; born Raipur (now Pakistan); US citizen at award |
| 4 | Mother Teresa | Peace | 1979 | Work with the poor and dying in Calcutta | Born in Albania; adopted Indian citizenship; Missionaries of Charity |
| 5 | Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar | Physics | 1983 | Stellar evolution; Chandrasekhar Limit | Indian-origin; US citizen; Chandrasekhar Limit = max mass of white dwarf |
| 6 | Amartya Sen | Economics | 1998 | Welfare economics; capability approach; poverty | Indian citizen; Trinity College Cambridge; Harvard; "Development as Freedom" |
| 7 | V.S. Naipaul | Literature | 2001 | Perceptive narrative; investigative literature | Trinidad-born; of Indian descent; British citizen |
| 8 | Venkatraman Ramakrishnan | Chemistry | 2009 | Structure and function of the ribosome | Tamil Nadu origin; British-American; President of Royal Society (2015–20) |
| 9 | Kailash Satyarthi | Peace | 2014 | Children's rights; anti-child labour | Indian citizen; Bachpan Bachao Andolan; shared with Malala Yousafzai |
| 10 | Abhijit Banerjee | Economics | 2019 | Experimental approach to alleviating poverty | Indian-origin; MIT; US citizen; shared with Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer |
| Record | Laureate | Year | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Nobel Prize ever | Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (Physics) | 1901 | Discovery of X-rays; first Nobel in any category |
| First woman Nobel laureate | Marie Curie (Physics) | 1903 | Also won Chemistry 1911 — only person to win in two sciences |
| First Asian Nobel laureate | Rabindranath Tagore (Literature) | 1913 | Also first Indian Nobel laureate |
| Only Indian citizen — natural science | C.V. Raman (Physics) | 1930 | Raman Effect; National Science Day = Feb 28 |
| Most Nobel Prizes by one person | Marie Curie | 1903 + 1911 | Physics + Chemistry; only person with two science Nobels |
| First all-female Nobel (Chemistry) | Charpentier + Doudna | 2020 | CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing |
| Oldest Nobel laureate | John B. Goodenough (Chemistry) | 2019 | Won at age 97 for lithium-ion batteries |
| Classic exam trap | Albert Einstein (Physics) | 1921 | Won for photoelectric effect, NOT Relativity |
| First AI/ML Nobel | Hinton + Hopfield (Physics) | 2024 | Artificial neural networks enabling machine learning |
| First Chinese woman Nobel | Tu Youyou (Medicine) | 2015 | Artemisinin for malaria; no university degree, PhD, or overseas training |
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📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833–1896) was a Swedish chemist and inventor who made his fortune from dynamite (1867). Troubled by how his inventions were used in warfare, he left his entire estate to award annual prizes to those who "conferred the greatest benefit to humankind" in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace. First prizes: 1901. Prizes awarded on December 10 — Nobel's death anniversary. Nobel Economics Prize added in 1968 by Sweden's central bank.
The Raman Effect, discovered on February 28, 1928, describes the inelastic scattering of photons — when light interacts with a molecule, a small fraction changes its wavelength, revealing molecular structure. C.V. Raman won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics. February 28 = National Science Day in India. Raman was the first Asian to win a Nobel in science and funded the research himself after European colleagues doubted his hypothesis.
2023 Medicine: Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman for mRNA vaccine technology (nucleoside base modifications) — directly enabled Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines; Karikó worked on this for 25 years despite being demoted. 2024 Physics: Hinton and Hopfield — first ever Nobel for AI/machine learning; Hinton left Google months before to warn about AI safety risks. 2024 Chemistry: AlphaFold (Hassabis) — AI predicts protein structures, also AI-related. Both 2024 Nobels were AI-connected.
C.V. Raman (Physics 1930) = only Indian citizen Nobel in natural science. Indian-origin but foreign citizens: Khorana (Medicine 1968, US), Chandrasekhar (Physics 1983, US), Ramakrishnan (Chemistry 2009, British), Banerjee (Economics 2019, US). Indian citizens with non-science Nobels: Tagore (Literature 1913 — first Asian Nobel), Mother Teresa (Peace 1979 — Albanian-born Indian citizen), Amartya Sen (Economics 1998), Kailash Satyarthi (Peace 2014).
Einstein did NOT win the Nobel Prize for the Theory of Relativity. He won the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect — explaining how light (photons) causes electrons to be ejected from metal surfaces, foundational for quantum theory. The prize was delayed to 1922 and given in absentia. His Relativity theories (Special 1905, General 1915), though transformative, were considered too theoretical and controversial for the Nobel Committee at the time.
Indian Nobel in natural science:
"Only CV Raman — 1930 — Physics — Raman Effect — National Science Day Feb 28"
→ CV Raman is THE answer; others (Chandrasekhar, Ramakrishnan, Khorana) = Indian origin, foreign citizens
Classic Nobel science traps:
"Einstein = Photoelectric Effect (NOT Relativity) | Curie = Physics AND Chemistry | Raman = Physics (NOT Chemistry)"
2020s Nobel Science highlights:
"2020 = CRISPR (Chem) | 2023 = mRNA vaccines (Med) | 2024 = AI/neural networks (Phys) + AlphaFold (Chem)"
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Albert Einstein won the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for the discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect — not for his theories of relativity. The photoelectric effect explained how light (photons) striking a metal surface ejects electrons, foundational for quantum mechanics. This is one of the most classic exam traps — students automatically think "relativity" but the correct answer is "photoelectric effect."
The Raman Effect (discovered February 28, 1928) describes the inelastic scattering of photons — when light interacts with a molecule, a small fraction changes wavelength, revealing information about molecular structure. C.V. Raman won the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics for this discovery, making him the only Indian citizen to win a Nobel in a natural science. February 28 is celebrated as National Science Day in India.
The 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Katalin Karikó and Drew Weissman for their discoveries concerning nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of effective mRNA vaccines. This technology directly enabled the Pfizer-BioNTech (BNT162b2) and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines — the most rapidly developed vaccines in history.
Marie Curie won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903 (shared with her husband Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel) for research on radiation, and the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911 for the discovery of the elements radium and polonium. She is the only person to win Nobels in two different scientific disciplines and remains the only woman to have won in both Physics and Chemistry.
The 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to John Hopfield and Geoffrey Hinton for foundational discoveries enabling machine learning using artificial neural networks — the first time artificial intelligence and machine learning research received the Nobel Prize in Physics. Geoffrey Hinton — often called the "Godfather of AI" — had left Google earlier in 2024, citing concerns about AI safety risks.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
The Nobel Prize was established by Swedish chemist, inventor, and industrialist Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833–1896), who made his fortune inventing dynamite in 1867. In his will of 1895, he directed that his estate be used to award annual prizes to those who conferred the greatest benefit to humankind in Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, and Peace. The first Nobel Prizes were awarded in 1901 — the 125th anniversary falls in 2026. The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics was added later in 1968. Prizes are awarded on December 10, the anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death.
C.V. Raman (Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman) is the only Indian citizen to win a Nobel Prize in a natural science. He won the Physics Nobel in 1930 for the discovery of the Raman Effect — the inelastic scattering of photons by molecules. His discovery was made on February 28, 1928, which is now celebrated as National Science Day in India. Several other scientists of Indian origin have won Nobel Prizes in science, but they were foreign citizens at the time — including Har Gobind Khorana (Medicine 1968, US citizen), Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (Physics 1983, US citizen), Venkatraman Ramakrishnan (Chemistry 2009, British citizen), and Abhijit Banerjee (Economics 2019, US citizen).
The 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to John J. Hopfield and Geoffrey E. Hinton for their foundational discoveries enabling machine learning using artificial neural networks — the first time AI and machine learning research has been recognised with a Nobel in Physics. Geoffrey Hinton, often called the "Godfather of AI," had resigned from Google in May 2023 to speak freely about AI safety risks. John Hopfield developed the Hopfield Network (1982), a recurrent neural network. Hinton pioneered deep learning methods. Their work laid the mathematical foundations for modern AI systems.
Nobel Prize winners appear in UPSC Prelims (Science and Technology), SSC CGL, Bank PO, and Railway exams through multiple patterns: the current year's winners (Physics, Chemistry, Medicine), landmark past winners (Einstein, Curie, Fleming, Watson-Crick), Indian Nobel laureates (C.V. Raman for science), notable firsts (first Nobel 1901, first woman Marie Curie, first Asian Tagore 1913), and classic exam traps (Einstein for photoelectric effect not relativity). The most recent Nobels (2023 mRNA vaccines, 2024 AI/neural networks and AlphaFold) are particularly high-frequency in Banking, SSC, and UPSC current affairs for 2025–26 exams.