Japanese physicists win Nobel

Japanese physicists win Nobel

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Two Japanese were awarded the 2008 on Tuesday for discovering the origin of the that predicts the existence of at least three families of quarks in nature. They shared the prize with an American who discovered the mechanism of spontaneous in .

It is the first time have shared the same prize.

The winners are , 64, executive director of the in Tokyo, and Toshihide Masukawa, 68, professor at in Kyoto, and Yoichiro Nambu, 87, at the University of Chicago, who is a naturalised American.

In recent years, Hideki Shirakawa was awarded the 2000 ; won the 2001 ; and was awarded the 2002 . The 2002 was awarded to Masatoshi Koshiba.

The prize carries a monetary award of 10 million (about 140 million yen). The awarding ceremony will be held in Stockholm on December 10.

CP violation is phenomenon of violation of combined conservation laws associated with (C) and parity (P) by a weak nuclear force, which is responsible for reactions such as the decay of .

The Kobayashi-Maskawa model (Masukawa’s name is given without the “u”in the name of the model), which the two Japanese physicists published in 1973, posits certain quantum mechanical effects in the weak force between quarks as the cause of CP violation. They showed theoretically that the existence of at least six kinds of quarks could cause CP violation.

When they announced the model, only could be confirmed, but new quarks have been subsequently discovered as they predicted and the sixth quark was found in 1994 at the in the United States, providing further evidence to support their theory.

Among many theories to prove CP violation, their model is considered the most reasonable and has become the basis for the standard theoretical explanation of the mechanism of elementary particles and thus the origin of universe.

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