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Nobel Prize Interviews
Science Video Interviews
Contact Details:
  • Gill Watson

  • The Vega Science Trust
  • The Innovation Centre
  • Science Park Square
  • Brighton UK
  • BN1 9SB
  • Tel +44 1273 678726
  • g.e.watson@vega.org.uk

The Vega Science Trust started recording video interviews with scientists and Nobel Laureates in the late 90's. It is our aim not only to provide an outlet for the research and the views of scientists but to provide an archive for the future of some of our greatest scientists.

These interviews have either been recorded as in-depth Face to Face interviews over an extended period of time or as shorter interviews recorded at the Lindau meeting of Nobel Laureates (described below).
 

Gerardus `t Hooft - Electroweak Interactions Gerardus `t Hooft - Science Video Interview: Electroweak Interactions
Video interview recorded in 2004.  Gerardus `t Hooft, the Netherlands shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1999 with Martinus J.F. Veltman, the Netherlands "for elucidating the quantum structure of electroweak interactions in physics"
 
Martinus J.F. Veltman - Electroweak Interactions Martinus J.F. Veltman - Science Video Interview: Electroweak Interactions
Video interview recorded in 2004.  Martinus J.F. Veltman, the Netherlands shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1999 with Gerardus `t Hooft the Netherlands "for elucidating the quantum structure of electroweak interactions in physics"
 
Masatoshi Koshiba - Detection Of Cosmic Neutrinos Masatoshi Koshiba - Science Video Interview: Detection Of Cosmic Neutrinos
Masatoshi Koshiba , Japan shared half of the Nobel Prize for Physics with Raymond Davis, USA in 2002 "for pioneering contributions to astrophysics, in particular for the detection of cosmic neutrinos" The other half was awarded to Riccardo Giacconi.
 
Riccardo Giacconi  - Cosmic X-ray Sources Riccardo Giacconi - Science Video Interview: Cosmic X-ray Sources
Riccardo Giacconi , USA was awarded half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2002 for "for pioneering contributions to astrophysics, which have led to the discovery of cosmic X-ray sources" The other half was awarded to Masatoshi Koshiba and Raymond Davis.
 

The Lindau Meeting - each year some thirty or more Nobel laureates come to Lindau to give lectures and interact with about 1000 young scientists from around the world.  In any one year the focus is generally on one area eg. chemistry, physics, medicine or economics. 


Links To Other Information:

The Lindau Website
The official Lindau website

e nobel museum
The official website of the Nobel Foundation

 

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 The Vega Science Trust is Actively Supported By:


Florida State University The University of Sussex The Leverhulme Trust The Higher Education Funding Council for England The Science and Technology Facilities Council The Kohn Foundation