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  1. Makoto Kobayashi (小林誠 Kobayashi Makoto?, Nagoya, 7 de abril de 1944) es un físico japonés conocido por su trabajo en el campo de la violación CP. Su artículo Violación CP en la teoría renormalizada de la interacción débil 1 (1973) escrito junto a Toshihide Maskawa está entre los tres documentos de energía física más citados. 2 .

  2. Makoto Kobayashi (小林 誠, Kobayashi Makoto, born April 7, 1944, in Nagoya, Japan) is a Japanese physicist known for his work on CP-violation who was awarded one-fourth of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physics "for the discovery of the origin of the broken symmetry which predicts the existence of at least three families of quarks in ...

  3. Biographical. I was born in Nagoya, Japan on April 7, 1944. As it was in the middle of the Second World War, I was evacuated to Kawagoe Village in Mie Prefecture the following year to escape the aerial bombardment over Nagoya. Soon after the war ended, my father passed away.

  4. Makoto Kobayashi. The Nobel Prize in Physics 2008. Born: 7 April 1944, Nagoya, Japan. Affiliation at the time of the award: High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK), Tsukuba, Japan. Prize motivation: “for the discovery of the origin of the broken symmetry which predicts the existence of at least three families of quarks in nature”

  5. Kobayashi Makoto is a Japanese scientist who was a corecipient, with Yoichiro Nambu and Maskawa Toshihide, of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Physics. Kobayashi and Maskawa shared half the prize for their discovery of the origin of broken symmetry, which created at least six quarks moments after the big.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. So how were they to theoretically prove this symmetry? Makoto Kobayashi and Toshihide Maskawa investigated a 6-type model with 6 types of quarks. In this case, the weak-interaction quantum mechanics becomes a theory with 9 parameters, and makes it possible to prove the broken CP symmetry.

  7. Telephone interview with Makoto Kobayashi following the announcement of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physics, 7 October 2008. The interviewer is Adam Smith, Editor-in-Chief of Nobelprize.org.