The classic comedy "The Big Bang Theory" has also been included in the Nobel Prize history

The classic comedy "The Big Bang Theory" has also been included in the Nobel Prize history

As a masterpiece that audiences talk about with great relish, "The Big Bang Theory", which officially ended this year, sublimated its theme in another way - that is, it truly "left" its name in the history of the Nobel Prize.

"Our universe was once very hot and dense, and 14 billion years ago it finally exploded..." At the Nobel Prize in Physics announcement conference held on the 8th, Ulf Danielsson, a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, opened the conference with a few lines from the theme song of "The Big Bang Theory".

According to the Associated Press, Goran Hansson, permanent secretary of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, said at the press conference that The Big Bang Theory is an "unparalleled achievement." Hansson praised it for spreading the world of science to all parts of the world. Hansson believes that based on this, it is very appropriate to quote the lyrics of the theme song of the show at the press conference.

In this regard, the Associated Press commented that this time, "The Big Bang Theory" that appeared in the annals of the Nobel Prize was no longer a scientific explanation of the origin of the universe, but had become an American TV sitcom.

The Big Bang Theory premiered in 2007. This comedy featuring a group of nerdy scientists from the West Coast of the United States has become a classic. In the finale, the protagonist Sheldon and his wife Amy won the Nobel Prize in Physics. In this regard, Hansson said that he hopes that fans of the show will like this detailed design of the press conference this year. "I hope Sheldon and Amy will not be too disappointed today."

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced on the 8th that the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physics will be awarded to three scientists. James Peebles from the United States won the prize for cosmology-related research, and Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz from Switzerland won the prize for the first discovery of an extrasolar planet. Goran Hansson, permanent secretary of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, announced the list of winners and their major achievements in the Royal Academy of Sciences meeting hall on the same day. Hansson said that this year's award-winning research has "contributed to our understanding of the evolution of the universe and the place of the earth in the universe."

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