Great inventions did not win the Nobel Prize

National Geographic voted for the groundbreaking findings that the Nobel Council has unfortunately missed.

Great inventions in the world but do not win Nobel prizes

World Wide Web

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Global information network (World Wide Web) is widely used around the world.(Photo: Leaderwest).

In the early 1960s, US federal government researchers created the computer network, the predecessor of the Internet. However, the person who raised the opinion about the global information network that people could access (World Wide Web) in 1989 was a British computer scientist, Tim Berners-Lee. He launched the first website in 1990.

The first set of genes

In May 1995, American scientist Craig Venter and his colleagues announced that it was possible to combine DNA sequencing and combinatorial techniques called Whole Genome Shotgun to read the entire DNA coding of an organism live, Haemophilus influenzae bacteria. Later, Venter's private company used a similar approach to sequence the genome of fruit flies and humans. Other laboratories are also based on Venter's approach to understanding the encoders of hundreds of other animals.

Black hole death

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Stephen Hawking gave a theory about the death of a black hole in 1970. (Photo: Techtimes).

In 1970, Stephen Hawking, "physical prince", thought that black holes could gradually lose weight and disappear after exploding with a series of gamma rays. But Hawking cannot prove the hypothesis. Black holes exist so long that humans have not been able to observe them at death. However, Hawking's black hole research today is reinforced by theoretical physics.

Chemical periodic table

The first Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1901 was awarded to Jacobus H. van 't Hoff for his pioneering research in the field of physicochemistry. With the creation of the periodic table of births in 1869, the Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleev was nominated for a Nobel Prize in 1905 and 1906 but did not win the prize by a member of the Nobel Council for his invention born from too long and too famous.

Light bulb

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Thomas Edison released the first light bulb in October 1879.(Photo: My Journey Through ME).

In October 1879, Thomas Edison released the first human light bulb, although the invention was granted a patent in the UK by Joseph Swan. Edison's research has brought light to tens of millions of people around the world and created huge demand for electricity. However, Edison died in 1931 without receiving any Nobel Prize.

Quark seeds

Murray Gell-Mann won the 1969 Nobel Prize in Physics "for contributions and findings related to the classification of basic molecules and their interactions" . However, his most famous finding is that quarks do not win any awards. Quark is the name for extremely small constituent particles that contribute to the creation of protons, neutrons and other molecules.