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Three Americans win Nobel Prize for explaining subatomic force
Summary from multiple countries, from articles in English
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Their work has helped science get a step closer to " fulfilling a grand dream, to formulate a unified theory comprising gravity as well - a theory for everything the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in awarding the physics prize. (article 7)
The "strong force" is the dominant force inside the nucleus that acts between the quarks inside the proton and the neutron, the foundation said in its citation. (article 7)
" The discovery which is awarded this year's Nobel Prize is of decisive importance for our understanding of how the theory of one of nature's fundamental forces works the Royal Swedish Academy of Science said in its award citation. (article 4)
Three American scientists won the 2004 Alfred Nobel physics prize on Tuesday for showing how tiny quark particles interact, helping to explain everything from how a coin spins to how the universe was built. (article 5)
STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Americans David J. Gross, Hugh David Politzer and Frank Wilczeck won the 2004 Nobel Prize in physics on Tuesday for their exploration of the force that binds particles inside the atomic nucleus. (article 8)
Their discoveries, published in 1973, led to the theory of quantum chromodynamics, or QCD “This theory was an important contribution to the Standard Model, ” the citation said. (article 8)
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Source articles
- ericans share Nobel for physics (dallasnews.com, 10/05/2004, 254 words)
- Three Americans win Nobel Prize for explaining subatomic force (sfgate.com, 10/05/2004, 581 words)
- Nobel honours sub-atomic world (BBC News, 10/05/2004, 428 words)
- 'Strong force' pushes U.S. trio to physics Nobel (USA Today, 10/05/2004, 239 words)
- Oct. 5, 2004 - By Simon Johnson (ABCNews, 10/05/2004, 571 words)
- Californians share Nobel physics prize (sfgate.com, 10/05/2004, 1004 words)
- Three Americans share Nobel for study of forces inside atomic nucleus (USA Today, 10/05/2004, 594 words)
- American trio splits Nobel Prize in physics (msnbc.msn.com, 10/05/2004, 555 words)
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blaster@cs.columbia.edu
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