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  1. Yang Chen-Ning or Chen-Ning Yang (simplified Chinese: 杨振宁; traditional Chinese: 楊振寧; pinyin: Yáng Zhènníng; born 1 October 1922), also known as C. N. Yang or by the English name Frank Yang, is a Chinese theoretical physicist who made significant contributions to statistical mechanics, integrable systems, gauge theory, and both ...

  2. Chen Ning Yang, Chinese-born American theoretical physicist who, with Tsung-Dao Lee, won the 1957 Nobel Prize for Physics for various studies in particle physics. Notably, the two men conducted research showing that parity is violated when certain elementary particles decay.

  3. Jan 15, 2024 · Lee and Yang were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1957 for their work on parity violation; Wu received no such recognition.

    • Suzie Sheehy
  4. Learn about the life and achievements of Chen Ning Yang, a Chinese-American physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1957 for his work on symmetry principles and statistical mechanics. Find out his education, career, family, and awards.

  5. Learn about the life and achievements of Yang Chen Ning, the first Chinese Nobel laureate in physics and a distinguished alumnus of Tsinghua University. Discover how he made groundbreaking contributions to parity non-conservation and gauge theory, and how he returned to his roots to advance basic science in China.

  6. Chen Ning Yang. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1957. Born: 22 September 1922, Hofei, Anhwei, China. Affiliation at the time of the award: Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ, USA. Prize motivation: “for their penetrating investigation of the so-called parity laws which has led to important discoveries regarding the elementary particles”

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  8. Professor Chen Ning Yang who together with TD Lee won the Nobel Prize in physics in 1957 for the discovery of non-conservation of parity in weak interaction, is also the author (with Robert Mills) of the modern non-Abelian gauge theory of 1954, which subsequently became the foundation of the standard model of elementary particle interactions.