Shanghai Daily

Chinese-born scientists among 9 winners of ‘Breakthrou­gh Prize’

- (AFP)

NINE scientists were recognized on Wednesday with a “Breakthrou­gh Prize,” a US$3 million Silicon Valley-funded award meant to confer Oscarsstyl­e glamor and prestige on the basic sciences.

The prizes in physics, life sciences and mathematic­s went to six men and three women, including four researcher­s who shared two prizes and five who get the full reward to themselves.

Vincent Lafforgue, of France’s National Center of Scientific Research, was awarded the prize in mathematic­s for groundbrea­king work in multiple areas.

Five United States-based researcher­s who won prizes in the life sciences included Frank Bennett and Adrian Krainer, from firms in Carlsbad, California, and Long Island, New York.

They were recognized for their discovery of a DNA-linked process that led to a treatment for a rare infantile disorder, spinal amyotrophy.

They were joined by Chinesebor­n scientists Zhuang Xiaowei (Harvard), who developed a new tool for super-resolution molecular imagery, and James Chen Zhijian (University of Texas), for his discovery of a DNA-sensing enzyme that could be associated with auto-immune disorders.

The US-based contingent was completed by Angelika Amon, an Austrian researcher at MIT, for determinin­g the consequenc­es of aneuploidy, when a cell does not have the normal number of chromosome­s.

The physics prizes went to Charles Kane and Eugene Mele (University of Pennsylvan­ia) and Jocelyn Bell Burnell (Oxford), an astrophysi­cist who was the recipient of a special prize in fundamenta­l physics.

Six US$100,000 awards also were given to 12 researcher­s for promising early career work.

The “Breakthrou­gh Prize” is only six years old but it is far more lavish than the coveted Nobel, which comes with prize money of about US$1 million.

The prizes will be presented at a star-studded red carpet ceremony in November, hosted at a NASA research center in Silicon Valley by actor Pierce Brosnan.

The mathematic­s prize propels 44-year-old Lafforgue into a celebrity world which has not typically been part of his dayto-day work, he acknowledg­ed.

“I’m game,” he said before the official announceme­nt. “It’s American culture.”

He recalled that Yuri Milner, a physician and Internet pioneer who became a prominent Silicon Valley investor, created the prize in 2012 to make scientists stars, hoping to repopulari­ze the basic sciences and generate public support.

“Breakthrou­gh Prize” patrons include Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Google co-founder Sergey Brin and Pony Ma, founder and CEO of Chinese Internet giant Tencent.

Unlike the Nobel, which often goes to retirees, the “Breakthrou­gh Prize” seeks to recognize recent discoverie­s, and not necessaril­y concrete applicatio­ns of their work.

“One does math for its beauty, not for its applicatio­ns,” said Lafforgue, while stressing that there are applicatio­ns of his work in the field of cryptograp­hy.

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