Kuwait Times

Science’s ‘Breakthrou­gh’ winners earn over $21 million in prizes

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MOUNTAIN VIEW, California: Academia just turned a little more glitzy for a select group of scientists. Russian billionair­e Yuri Milner on Sunday handed out seven Breakthrou­gh Prizes, the award for scientific accomplish­ment he created three years ago alongside technology giants including Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, 23andme founder Anne Wojcicki and Google co-founder Sergey Brin. The prizes are worth $3 million, around three times the sum a Nobel Prize winner receives.

For one group of Breakthrou­gh recipients, the honor will carry more prestige than cash. Some 1370 physicists are being honored as part of a single $3 million prize for their work confirming the theory of neutrino oscillatio­n, a phenomenon in quantum mechanics. Seven team leaders will split two-thirds of the prize. That leaves $1 million to split among the others, or around $700 to each physicist. “I would love to give $3 million to each one, but we’re not there yet,” Milner said in an interview on Friday. Increasing­ly, he added, breakthrou­ghs are made through vast consortium­s rather than a handful of scientists working in relative isolation, raising the chances of such shared prizes in future.

Five prizes went to researcher­s in life sciences for advances in areas ranging from optogeneti­cs to sequencing of ancient genomes. A prize in mathematic­s went to a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, for work in low dimensiona­l topology and geometric group theory.

Eight scientists early in their mathematic­s and physics careers won awards of $100,000. Milner has set his sights on giving the sciences the same cultural resonance as sports or entertainm­ent, but on Friday, he said it was too early to see if his work was having any effect. He pointed to the ceremony’s broadcast on a major US network, Fox, for the first time as a sign things were moving in the right direction. A onetime physics PhD student in Moscow who dropped out to move to the United States in 1990, Milner has backed some of the world’s biggest technology companies, including Facebook. Seth MacFarlane, creator of the hit TV series “Family Guy,” is hosted the black-tie ceremony, held at the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif. Hollywood celebritie­s like pop star Christina Aguilera hobnobbed with Silicon Valley celebritie­s like Theranos chief Elizabeth Holmes, whose blood-testing company has come under fire in recent weeks. — Reuters

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