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Things to know about the Nobel Prizes

STOCKHOLM (AP) — The annual Nobel Prize announcements are over with the final award, for economics, going to Harvard professor Claudia Goldin for advancing the understanding of women’s labor market outcomes.

The 2023 prize announcements started on Oct. 2 with the Nobel Prize in medicine being awarded to two scientists whose discoveries enabled the development of mRNA vaccines against COVID-19.

The following day, three scientists won the physics prize for their work on how electrons zip around the atom in the tiniest fractions of seconds.

Three U.S.-based researchers shared the chemistry prize on Oct. 4 for their study of quantum dots — tiny particles that can release very bright colored light and are used in electronics and medical imaging.

On Oct. 5, the Swedish Academy awarded Norwegian writer Jon Fosse the literature award for works that “give voice to the unsayable."

Imprisoned activist Narges Mohammadi won the Nobel Peace Prize the next day for her campaign against the oppression of women and for human rights in Iran.

The awards will be handed out on Dec. 10.

Here are some things to know about the Nobel Prizes:

AN IDEA MORE POWERFUL THAN DYNAMITE

The Nobel Prizes were created by Alfred Nobel, a 19th-century businessman and chemist from Sweden. He held more than 300 patents but his claim to fame before the Nobel Prizes was having invented dynamite by mixing nitroglycerine with a compound that made the explosive more stable.

Dynamite soon became popular in construction and mining as well as in the weapons industry. It made Nobel a very rich man. Perhaps it also made him think about his legacy, because toward the end of his life he decided to use his vast fortune to fund annual prizes “to those who, during the preceding year, have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind.”

The first Nobel Prizes were presented in 1901, five years after his death. In 1968, a sixth prize was created, for economics, by Sweden’s central bank. Though Nobel purists stress that the economics prize is technically not a Nobel Prize, it’s always presented together with the others.

PEACE IN NORWAY

For reasons that are not entirely clear, Nobel decided that the peace prize should be awarded in Norway and the other prizes in Sweden. Nobel historians suspect Sweden’s history of militarism may have been a factor.

During Nobel’s lifetime, Sweden and Norway were in a union, which the Norwegians reluctantly joined after the Swedes invaded their country in 1814. It’s possible that Nobel thought Norway would be a more suitable location for a prize meant to encourage “fellowship among nations.”