The Nobel Prize in Physics is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895 and awarded annually since 1901.
(The other 4 prizes are in Chemistry, Literature, and Physiology or Medicine, and the Nobel Peace Prize.)
Wilhelm Wien won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1911.
Erwin Schrodinger won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1933.
Enrico Fermi won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1938.
Wolfgang Pauli won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1945.
Max Born won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954.
The Nobel Prize in Physics was established in 1895 and first awarded in 1901. It and four other prizes were established in accordance with the will of chemist and philanthropist Alfred Nobel. The other prizes are in Chemistry, Literature, and Physiology or Medicine, and the Nobel Peace Prize.
The five Nobel Prizes are: Nobel Prize in Physics Nobel Prize in Chemistry Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Nobel Prize in Literature Nobel Peace Prize
she won the Nobel prize for physics in 1903
Polykarp Kusch won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1955.
Robert Hofstadter won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1961.
Alfred Kastler won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1966.
John Bardeen won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1972.
Antony Hewish won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1974.
Burton Richter won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1976.
Carlo Rubbia won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1984.
Ernst Ruska won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986.
Georges Charpak won The Nobel Prize in Physics in 1992.