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Nobel Prize News 6 October 2025 - 7 October 2025

Quantum Tunneling Goes Big: The Tiny Circuit Experiment That Won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics

Quantum Tunneling Goes Big: The Tiny Circuit Experiment That Won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics

Quantum Tunneling, Explained At the heart of this Nobel-winning discovery is a phenomenon straight out of quantum theory: quantum tunneling. In classical physics, if you throw a ball at a solid wall, it will always bounce back – it doesn’t have enough energy to break through. By analogy, an electron trapped in a low-energy state cannot classically overcome a higher-energy barrier. But quantum mechanics allows for a spooky exception: the particle can sometimes “tunnel” through the barrier and appear on the other side, as if by ghostly permission of probability nobelprize.org nobelprize.org. This is a well-known microscopic effect – it
Nobel Prize 2025: How Immune “Security Guards” Stop Autoimmune Disease

Nobel Prize 2025: How Immune “Security Guards” Stop Autoimmune Disease

A Breakthrough in Immune Self-Control In a landmark recognition for immunology, the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to three scientists who unlocked how the immune system keeps itself from going rogue. Mary E. Brunkow (Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle), Fred Ramsdell (Sonoma Biotherapeutics, San Francisco), and Shimon Sakaguchi (Osaka University, Japan) earned the prize “for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance that prevents the immune system from harming the body” nobelprize.org. In essence, they found the body’s own “off-switch”: a mechanism that stops immune cells from attacking healthy tissues. Their work solved a medical mystery
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