Japanese-born American Syukuro Manabe, German Klaus Hasselmann and Italian Giorgio Parisi won the 2021 Nobel Prize for Physics on Tuesday for work that helps understand complex physical systems such as Earth's changing climate.
One half of the prize, worth 10 million Swedish crowns ($1.15 million), goes in equal parts to Manabe, who is 90, and Hasselmann for modelling Earth's climate and reliably predicting global warming.
The other half goes to Parisi for discovering "hidden rules" behind seemingly random movements and swirls in gases or liquids.
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"Complex systems are characterized by randomness and disorder and are difficult to understand," the Swedish Academy of Sciences said in a statement. "This year's Prize recognizes new methods for describing them and predicting their long-term behavior."
Manabe is now at Princeton University in the U.S., Hasselmann at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany, and Parisi at Sapienza University of Rome.
Physics is the second Nobel Prize to be awarded this week after Americans David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian won in the medicine category.
The Nobel Prizes were created in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor and businessman Alfred Nobel and have been awarded since 1901, with only a handful of interruptions, primarily due to the two world wars.
As last year, there will be no banquet in Stockholm because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The laureates will receive their medals and diplomas in their home countries.
The physics announcement will be followed in coming days by the awards for chemistry, literature, peace and economics.
Among the Nobel Prizes, physics has often taken center stage, with awards often going to major breakthroughs in the world's understanding of the universe. Previous winners include Albert Einstein and the husband-and-wife team of Pierre Curie and Marie Curie.
Last year, scientists Roger Penrose, Reinhard Genzel and Andrea Ghez won the Nobel Physics Prize for their discoveries concerning black holes.