Hideki Yukawa receives the Nobel Prize

The Nobel Prize in Physics 1949 was awarded to Hideki Yukawa "for his prediction of the existence of mesons on the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces."
Planck's quantum hypothesis
Bohr's atomic model
de Broglie hypothesis
Schrödinger's Quantum Mechanics
Relativistic quantum mechanics
Alpha decay theory
Fermi theory of beta decay
Nuclear Strong Interaction Theory
Nuclear Fusion Theory
Nuclear Fission
First reaction of Nuclear Fission
Atomic Bomb
Nuclear collective model
Hydrogen bomb
Structure of Proton using the SLAC Laboratory
Classification of crystalline symmetries
Hall Effect
Discovery of mercury superconductivity by Onnes
Study of Crystals using X-rays by W.H. & W.L. Bragg
Discovery of X-ray diffraction by Crystals by Van Laue
Raman scattering
Transistor Effect
The superconductivity theory of Ginzburg-Landau
Theory of Superconductivity BCS
Josephson Effect tunneling in superconductors
Discovery of Quasi-crystals
Fullerene 60
High-temperature superconductivity
Giant magnetoresistance
Carbon nanotube
Discovering Graphene
The Quantum Electrodynamics
The quark model
Discovery of carrier particles of weak force W and Z
The Higgs boson
The Great Debate
Lemaître theory of the expansion of the Universe
Expansion of the universe
Dark Matter
Prediction of Neutron Stars
Primordial Nucleosynthesis
WMAP Satellite
Planck Satellite
Baryon acoustic oscillations
Gravitational waves of two neutron stars
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1949 was awarded to Hideki Yukawa "for his prediction of the existence of mesons on the basis of theoretical work on nuclear forces."
All events in the topic Nuclear Physics:
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