🏅 Nobel Prize 2024
Complete UPSC notes — All 6 Nobel Prizes · Winners · Their discoveries · Why it matters · India connect · PYQs · MCQs · Quick Revision
| Field | Winner(s) | Country | Awarded For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🧬 Medicine/Physiology | Victor Ambros, Gary Ruvkun | USA | Discovery of microRNA and its role in gene regulation |
| ⚛️ Physics | John J. Hopfield, Geoffrey E. Hinton | USA; British-Canadian | Foundational work enabling machine learning with artificial neural networks |
| 🔬 Chemistry | David Baker; Demis Hassabis, John M. Jumper | USA; British; USA | Computational protein design (Baker); Protein structure prediction — AlphaFold2 (Hassabis & Jumper) |
| 📚 Literature | Han Kang | South Korea | Intense poetic prose confronting historical traumas and fragility of human life |
| ☮️ Peace | Nihon Hidankyo (organisation) | Japan | Efforts to eliminate nuclear weapons through Hibakusha witness testimony |
| 📈 Economics | Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, James A. Robinson | USA (Turkey-born; UK-born; UK-born) | Studies on institutions and their impact on prosperity; colonial legacy |
Victor Ambros (left) — University of Massachusetts Medical School. Gary Ruvkun (right) — Harvard Medical School / Massachusetts General Hospital. Both awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their landmark discovery of microRNA in 1993.
Why important? Humans have ~2,000 different microRNA genes. They regulate nearly 60% of all protein-coding genes. Defects in microRNA regulation are linked to cancer, heart disease, diabetes, neurological disorders. Medical applications: cancer therapy, drug targets, disease biomarkers.
• Model organism: Caenorhabditis elegans (roundworm)
• First miRNA: lin-4
• Mechanism: binds mRNA → blocks translation → gene silencing
• Also called: post-transcriptional gene regulation
• Human miRNA genes: ~2,000
• Governs ~60% of protein-coding genes
• Related tech: RNA interference (RNAi) — broader concept; miRNA = natural form
• Cardiovascular disease: miRNAs regulate heart muscle function
• Diabetes: miRNAs control insulin secretion
• Neurological diseases: Parkinson's, Alzheimer's linked to miRNA dysregulation
• Biomarkers: miRNAs in blood → early disease detection
1. It is used in developing gene-silencing therapies.
2. It can be used in developing therapies for the treatment of cancer.
3. It can be used to develop hormone replacement therapies.
4. It can be used to produce crop plants that are resistant to viral pathogens.
- (a) 1, 2 and 4 ✓ Correct
- (b) 2 and 3
- (c) 1 and 3
- (d) 1, 3 and 4
John J. Hopfield (left) — Princeton University, USA. Geoffrey E. Hinton (right) — University of Toronto, Canada / Google (resigned 2023). Both awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics for their foundational work enabling machine learning with artificial neural networks — the mathematical foundations of modern AI.
2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (official Nobel Prize illustrations). Left: David Baker (University of Washington) — awarded for computational protein design. Centre: Demis Hassabis (Google DeepMind CEO) — co-creator of AlphaFold2. Right: John M. Jumper (Google DeepMind) — co-creator of AlphaFold2. Prize split: half to Baker; half shared between Hassabis and Jumper.
Han Kang — South Korean author. 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature. Official Nobel Prize illustration. Born 1970, Gwangju, South Korea.
| Work | Year | Theme |
|---|---|---|
| The Vegetarian | 2007 | A woman's decision to stop eating meat and its violent consequences. Explores bodily autonomy, societal pressure, and mental health. Won Man Booker International Prize (2016). |
| Human Acts | 2016 | Examines the 1980 Gwangju Uprising (a pro-democracy massacre by South Korean military). Explores collective trauma, state violence, and the fragility of human life. |
| We Do Not Part | 2024 | Her latest work (released same year as Nobel). Continues her exploration of human suffering, historical trauma, and resilience. |
Nobel Peace Prize 2024 — Nihon Hidankyo. The origami crane (paper crane) is a powerful symbol of peace in Japan, associated with Sadako Sasaki — a girl who survived the Hiroshima atomic bomb and is said to have folded paper cranes before dying of radiation-induced leukemia. The crane has become a global symbol of peace and nuclear disarmament, making it the perfect visual emblem for this Nobel Peace Prize award to Nihon Hidankyo, the organisation representing Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb survivors.
Hibakusha (被爆者) = "explosion-affected people" — survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs. Their firsthand testimonies of the horror of nuclear weapons have been central to global anti-nuclear advocacy. As Hibakusha age and pass away, preserving their testimony becomes urgent.
• Only organisation to have survived the actual use of nuclear weapons
• Witness testimony creates moral stigma around nuclear weapons
• Connects to: Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), Treaty on Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT)
• India's position: No First Use (NFU) policy; credible minimum deterrence
• India supports universal, non-discriminatory nuclear disarmament
• India NOT a signatory to NPT as a nuclear weapons state
• This Nobel connects to UPSC questions on nuclear disarmament, India's nuclear doctrine
2024 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences (official Nobel Prize illustrations). Left: Daron Acemoglu (MIT) — Turkish-American. Centre: Simon Johnson (MIT) — British-American. Right: James A. Robinson (University of Chicago) — British-American. All three are at US institutions.
| Laureate | Key Contribution | Signature Work |
|---|---|---|
| Daron Acemoglu 🇹🇷🇺🇸 MIT | Economic theory on how institutions determine prosperity. "Reversal of Fortune" paper showing former rich colonies are now poor because colonisers set up extractive institutions. | Book: Why Nations Fail (with Robinson, 2012). Also: The Narrow Corridor. Research on technology and inequality, AI and labour markets. |
| Simon Johnson 🇬🇧🇺🇸 MIT | Former IMF Chief Economist. Research on settler mortality — where colonisers died at high rates (due to disease), they set up extractive institutions; where they settled, inclusive institutions. This explains modern income differences. | "The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development" (2001) — one of the most cited economics papers ever. |
| James A. Robinson 🇬🇧🇺🇸 Univ. of Chicago | Political economy — how political institutions and power dynamics determine economic outcomes. Democracy, elite capture, and long-run development. | Book: Why Nations Fail (with Acemoglu, 2012). The Narrow Corridor. Research on how democracy leads to prosperity. |
- (a) MicroRNA directly synthesises proteins by binding to ribosomes in the cell
- (b) MicroRNA binds to messenger RNA (mRNA), preventing its translation into protein — a process called post-transcriptional gene regulation
- (c) MicroRNA modifies the DNA sequence of genes, permanently silencing them
- (d) MicroRNA transports amino acids to the ribosome during protein synthesis
- (a) Because Hopfield and Hinton are both trained physicists with no background in computer science
- (b) Because artificial neural networks were first used only in physics experiments before being applied to computers
- (c) Because Hopfield and Hinton used concepts from statistical physics — such as energy landscapes and spin systems — to build the mathematical models that underpin neural networks
- (d) Because the Nobel Prize has no category for Computer Science or Artificial Intelligence
- (a) Finding the complete DNA sequence of all 200 million known species on Earth
- (b) Synthesising all known proteins in laboratory conditions without using living cells
- (c) Mapping the complete human genome including all non-coding regions
- (d) Predicting the 3-dimensional structure of proteins from their amino acid sequence alone — a problem that previously required years of experimental work per protein
- (a) Japanese veterans of World War II who fought against the Allied forces
- (b) Survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (1945) — called Hibakusha — who advocate for nuclear weapons abolition
- (c) Japanese citizens who were affected by the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident
- (d) Scientists from Japan who developed the first nuclear reactor in Asia
- (a) European colonisation always benefited the colonised nations by introducing modern institutions universally
- (b) Geography and climate, not institutions, are the primary determinants of economic prosperity
- (c) Where Europeans settled permanently (low mortality regions), they created inclusive institutions → these countries are prosperous today; where they only extracted resources (high mortality regions), they created extractive institutions → these countries remain poor
- (d) Democratic institutions are harmful to economic growth in developing nations because they create political instability
1. Han Kang is the first South Korean and first Asian woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.
2. Geoffrey Hinton was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for inventing the internet.
3. AlphaFold2 predicted the structure of nearly all 200 million known proteins, making it freely available to researchers worldwide.
Which is/are correct?
- (a) 1 only
- (b) 1 and 3 only
- (c) 2 and 3 only
- (d) 1, 2 and 3
| Prize | Winners | For | Key UPSC Facts |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🧬 Medicine | Victor Ambros (USA), Gary Ruvkun (USA) | Discovery of microRNA (1993) | miRNA = tiny RNA (~22 nucleotides). Binds mRNA → blocks translation → gene silencing. Post-transcriptional regulation. First miRNA: lin-4. Organism: C. elegans. Applications: cancer therapy, disease biomarkers. ~2,000 miRNA genes in humans; regulate ~60% of protein-coding genes. |
| ⚛️ Physics | John J. Hopfield (USA), Geoffrey E. Hinton (British-Canadian) | Artificial neural networks enabling machine learning | Hopfield Network (1982): associative memory using spin physics. Hinton: Boltzmann Machine, backpropagation, image recognition. Both used STATISTICAL PHYSICS to build AI models. Hinton = "Godfather of AI." Resigned Google 2023 — AI safety concerns. Physics Nobel for AI because rooted in physics methodology. |
| 🔬 Chemistry | David Baker (USA); Demis Hassabis (British), John M. Jumper (USA) | Computational protein design; Protein structure prediction (AlphaFold2) | Baker: designs NEW proteins using computers (Rosetta software) — pharma, vaccines, sensors. Hassabis + Jumper: AlphaFold2 predicts 3D protein structure from amino acid sequence in seconds. Solved 50-year protein folding problem. ~200 million proteins in database. FREE for all researchers. Applications: drug discovery, antibiotic resistance, plastic degradation. |
| 📚 Literature | Han Kang (South Korea) | Poetic prose confronting historical traumas | First South Korean + First Asian woman Nobel in Literature. Key works: The Vegetarian (2007), Human Acts (2016 — Gwangju Uprising), We Do Not Part (2024). Themes: grief, violence, historical trauma, mental health, fragility of human life. |
| ☮️ Peace | Nihon Hidankyo (Japan — organisation) | Nuclear weapons abolition through Hibakusha testimony | Represents Hibakusha — survivors of Hiroshima (Aug 6, 1945) and Nagasaki (Aug 9, 1945) atomic bombings. Founded 1956. Campaigns for global nuclear disarmament. Timely amid Russia's nuclear threats and North Korea tests. Connects to: NPT, TPNW (India not signed), CTBT. Origami crane = symbol of peace (Sadako Sasaki). |
| 📈 Economics | Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, James A. Robinson (all US institutions) | Institutions and prosperity; colonial legacy | Core finding: INSTITUTIONS (not geography/culture) determine prosperity. Inclusive institutions → prosperity. Extractive institutions → poverty. Colonial finding: settler colonies (USA, Australia) got inclusive institutions; extraction colonies (much of Africa, Asia) got extractive → explains modern inequality. Book: Why Nations Fail (2012). Applies to India's colonial experience and post-independence institution building. |
Trap 1 — "MicroRNA modifies DNA sequence to silence genes" → WRONG! MicroRNA acts at the mRNA (messenger RNA) level — NOT at the DNA level. MicroRNA binds to mRNA and prevents its translation into protein — this is POST-TRANSCRIPTIONAL regulation. DNA is not modified. Gene silencing via miRNA is reversible and does not change the genetic code. DNA modification would be epigenetics or gene editing (CRISPR) — different technologies. miRNA = natural gene regulator found in all complex organisms.
Trap 2 — "Hinton's Physics Nobel was for inventing deep learning algorithms only" → WRONG/INCOMPLETE! The Physics Nobel was explicitly for work using STATISTICAL PHYSICS concepts to build artificial neural network models — not just for "deep learning" in general. The Nobel Committee emphasised the physical science foundation. Also: AlphaFold2 (Chemistry) is built ON the neural networks Hopfield and Hinton pioneered — the Physics and Chemistry Nobels are directly connected through AI/neural network technology.
Trap 3 — "David Baker designed proteins using AlphaFold2" → WRONG! David Baker (half of Chemistry Nobel) does COMPUTATIONAL PROTEIN DESIGN — designing entirely NEW proteins that don't exist in nature using his Rosetta software. AlphaFold2 does PROTEIN STRUCTURE PREDICTION — predicting the 3D shape of EXISTING proteins. These are the complementary but different halves of the Chemistry Nobel. Baker = creates new. Hassabis/Jumper = predicts existing.
Trap 4 — "Nihon Hidankyo represents Fukushima nuclear accident survivors" → WRONG! Nihon Hidankyo represents ATOMIC BOMB survivors (Hibakusha) from Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings (1945) — not Fukushima (2011 nuclear power plant accident). These are completely different events. Hiroshima/Nagasaki = nuclear weapons used in war. Fukushima = nuclear power plant meltdown after earthquake/tsunami. Hibakusha = survivors of the world's ONLY nuclear weapons attacks in history.
Trap 5 — "The Economics Nobel shows geography determines prosperity, not institutions" → WRONG! The laureates' research DIRECTLY CHALLENGES the geography hypothesis. Their finding is the opposite: INSTITUTIONS determine prosperity, not geography. Their key evidence: countries in similar geographic conditions have very different prosperity depending on the colonial institutions imposed on them. The "Colonial Origins of Comparative Development" paper specifically controls for geography to isolate the institutional effect.


