University of California - Santa Barbara

12/10/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/10/2025 17:07

UCSB physicists accept Nobel Prizes in Sweden

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Matt Perko, with material from © Nobel Prize Outreach. Photo: Clément Morin
December 10, 2025

UCSB physicists accept Nobel Prizes in Sweden

In a ceremony full of splendor, music and admiration, UC Santa Barbara physics professors Michel Devoret and John Martinis, alongside their mentor, UC Berkeley physicist John Clarke, on Dec. 10 officially received their Nobel Prizes from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden. Each presented with a medal and a diploma, the scientists were selected for the Nobel Prize in Physics "for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit."

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© Nobel Prize Outreach. Photo: Clément Morin
UC Santa Barbara physicist John Martinis, left, receives his Nobel Prize in Physics from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden.
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© Nobel Prize Outreach. Photo: Clément Morin
UC Santa Barbara/Yale physicist Michel Devoret, left, receives his Nobel Prize in Physics from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden
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© Nobel Prize Outreach. Photo: Clément Morin
UC Berkeley physicist John Clarke receives his Nobel Prize in Physics from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden
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© Nobel Prize Outreach. Photo: Clément Morin
From left, physicists John Clarke (UC Berkeley), Michel Devoret (UCSB/Yale) and John Martinis (UCSB), who are the 2025 Nobel Laureates in Physics
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The ceremony also honored the laureates of the 2025 Nobel Prizes in Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, and Economic Sciences. Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, who is in hiding and under a travel ban, was unable to attend her ceremony in Oslo, Norway; her daughter accepted the award on her behalf.

The Nobel Prize ceremony and subsequent banquet was one of the main highlights in a weeklong celebration that includes shows and artistic presentations from and for the community, lectures from the laureates, a musical concert and thought-provoking dialogues.

Lectures delivered by John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis, the 2025 Nobel laureates in Physics
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