Chulalongkorn University BRIDGES Nobel Laureate Talk Series: A Global Gathering of Minds

BANGKOK, Dec. 18, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The Chulalongkorn University BRIDGES Nobel Laureate Talk Series has been unveiled to the public with five honorable keynote speakers whose achievement make a statement in the science world recognised by the prestige global award of Nobel Prize. It is a great opportunity to learn more about their story of success, knowledge and experience, which is ready to be shared with the audience for promoting peace in the global community.

Started with the Nobel laureate keynote speaker Professor Takaaki Kajita who won the Nobel Prize in physics in 2015, the 64-year-old active physicist from the Institute for Cosmic Ray Research of the University of Tokyo in Japan came to reveal a code of success by stressing the importance of closer cooperation from scientists around the world that would be able to unlock the secret of universe.

His renowned project of Super-Kamiokande to decode the universe secrecy is an obvious precedent case, with a gathering for over 600 members from 22 countries around the world, including controversial Russia and Ukrain for finding out better understanding toward the origin of matter in the universe. They have worked together to develop the Super-Kamiokande detector, which is a powerful tool to help the physicists understand more about the universe that it is expected to complete by next year. He has strong belief in international cooperation for producing significant results.

"Peace is very important for science development. And science is more important than the political divides. I think that science, in particular international scientific collaborations, plays a very important role for peace-building," he said at the first session of the Chulalongkorn University BRIDGES Nobel Laureate Talk Series under the topic of "The Importance of Science for Peace-Building".

His strong efforts and dedication to his career path developed the achievement when he had discovered that the oscillations of neutrinos from one flavor to another means that those subatomic particles have mass. It has become some of the most promising, powerful, versatile and efficient way to explore particle physics and the universe itself that won the Nobel Prize.

Additional four Nobel Laureates are on the list. They are Professor Eric S. Maskin, Nobel Laureate for Economics with a topic of "Why globalization has failed to reduce inequality". (January 15, 2024), Professor Edvard Moser, Nobel Laureate for Medicine "The brain's GPS: How we know where we are". (February 12, 2024), Professor Robert F. Engle III, Nobel Laureate for Economics "A financial approach to climate risk". (February 27, 2024) and Professor Randy W. Schekman, Nobel Laureate for Medicine "The role of public universities as an engine for social change". (March 25, 2024). Chulalongkorn University has organised the event in an occasion of a part of the Japan-ASEAN BRIDGES event series facilitated by the International Peace Foundation.