Three Nobel laureates in physics for climate modeling
This year, three scientists from Japan, Germany and Italy have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for their work in modeling the Earth's climate to predict global warming. Sukuro Manabe, Klaus Hazelmann has been instrumental in modeling global warming. At the same time, Giorgio Parisi has done research to identify internal changes in the physical system up to the molecular level.
Sukuro Manabe is from Japan and is a senior meteorologist at Princeton University in the United States. Klaus Hazelmann is from Germany and Max Planck is a professor at the Institute of Meteorology. Giorgio Parisi is from Idli and is a professor at the University of Sapienza in Rome, Italy.
According to the Nobel Committee of the Swedish Academy of Sciences, Manabe and Hazelman laid the foundations of the Earth's meteorological knowledge and studied how it affects humans. In 1960, Manabe showed that rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere were contributing to global warming. It gave birth to current climate and temperature models. Over the next decade, Hazelman developed a model that combined weather and climate. This made it possible to predict the nature of climate change with the help of meteorological models. He explored the effects of human action on the weather and its signs. Parisi developed mathematical and physical models that explained the interrelationships between complex systems such as mathematics, biology, neuroscience, and machine learning.
Global warming is now a very serious issue. It leads to extreme climate change. Floods in some places and droughts in others. In recent times, there have been many storms in India, floods in many places, storms and floods in the United States and other countries have become the norm. Global climate change and climate change are difficult to predict. This year's Nobel Prize has been awarded for research into creating physical models for it. Observing the complexities of climate change is a difficult task, but three of this year's Nobel laureates have done it for future generations.
After the announcement of the award, Parisi said that the threat of climate change and temperature rise remains and we need to take concrete decisions to prevent it. We must do this today to secure the future of future generations.