October 5, 2021

Illustration: depositphotos.com

"Nobel winners Manaba and Hasselman brought enormous benefit to humanity by providing a solid physical basis for our understanding of climate"

An accessible explanation of the science behind the Nobel Prize in Physics won by Syukuro Manaba from Princeton University and Klaus Hasselmann from the Max Planck Institute who perfected the climate models as published on the Nobel Prize website. Translation: Dr
From right to left: Reot Yanon Berman- Executive Director of the Wolf Foundation, Prof. Dan Shechtman- Chairman of the Wolf Foundation, Prof. Giorgio Parizzi, Rector Antonella Polimani, Dror Idar- Ambassador of Israel in Italy

Nobel followed Wolf again in the same year: and this time Prof. Giorgio Frisi

The Nobel Prize in Physics awarded today to Prof. Giorgio Parisi is just a small number of the names of Nobel Prize winners over the years, who previously won the prestigious Wolf Prize, of the Wolf Foundation.
The climate crisis. Illustration: shutterstock_

The climate crisis reaches the Nobel Prize in Physics: two of the developers of the climate models and a researcher of complexity won the Nobel 2021

Half of the prize was awarded to Syokuro Manaba from Princeton University and Klaus Hasselman, the Max Planck Institute, who perfected the climate models, and the Italian Giorgio Frisi, who deals with the transition between simple and complex systems * Frisi said at the announcement event:
Yaffe Zilbrashtz - Chairman of the Council for Higher Education. Public relations photo

350,000 students are expected to study in the 4 school year, an annual increase of about XNUMX%

The Council for Higher Education reports ahead of the opening of the academic school year that after a jump of 24,000 in the number of students in the higher education system in Israel, the forecast for a more moderate increase in the number of students in the academic year of Israel
In pink: a single coherent beam of light produced by an array of 30 separate laser sources. Credit SimplySci Animations

An array of small lasers acting as a single light source

A joint team of researchers from the Technion and Germany has developed a coherent array of vertical lasers - a technology that was considered impossible until a few years ago