The 2026 Shaw Prize in Astronomy has been awarded to Ken’ichi Nomoto and Stanford Woosley. They share the prize “for their studies of stellar explosions and the origin of the elements”.
In this episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast, Woosley and Nomoto talk about the astrophysics of supernovae – exploding stars – and what these spectacular events tell us about the elemental composition of the universe and how it has expanded since the Big Bang.
Nomoto is emeritus professor and visiting senior scientist at the Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe, at Japan’s University of Tokyo. Woosley is professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of California, Santa Cruz in the US.
This podcast is sponsored by the Shaw Prize Foundation.
- The Shaw Prize is an international prize based in Hong Kong. Currently, it consists of three annual awards. The Shaw Prize in Astronomy; The Shaw Prize in Life Science & Medicine; and The Shaw Prize in Mathematical Sciences. In 2027 a fourth prize will be awarded for work in computer science. Each prize carries a monetary award of $1.2m. The prize was established by Runrun Shaw, a media mogul and philanthropist. It was first awarded in 2004 and since then 121 prizes have been given individuals from across the world.