In a certain sense, if a person can win a Nobel Prize once in his life, it can be said that he has achieved success and his life has not been wasted. Not only is there no one who can win the Nobel Prize twice, but he is also very rare in terms of real impact.
There are only a few such "rare and rare" people in the world:
Marie Curie. ? Polish physicist and chemist. In 1903, she and her husband Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel jointly won the Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering radioactive substances and refining radium and polonium. In 1911, they won the Nobel Prize for their achievements in radioactive chemistry. Bell Prize in Chemistry.
John Bardeen, American physicist won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956 and 1972. He is the first person to win the Nobel Prize twice on the same platform. ?
Linus Pauling, American chemist
Won the 1954 Nobel Prize in Chemistry and the 1962 Nobel Peace Prize. He is the only person to have won the Nobel Prize twice. ?1954: Linus Pauling wins the Nobel Prize in Chemistry alone. His contribution was to elucidate the nature of chemical bonds and apply them to explain the structure of complex substances. ?1962: Linus Pauling wins the Nobel Peace Prize alone. Oppose nuclear weapons testing, nuclear weapons proliferation, and nuclear weapons use.
Fred (Frederick)? Sanger?, a British biochemist, won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1958 and 1980 respectively. The reasons for both awards can be summarized as: sequencing. Moreover, he is the only living person to have won the Nobel Prize twice.
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