Nobel celebrations in Stockholm
December 4, 2015
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The eyes of the Queen’s community are on Stockholm as Professor Emeritus Arthur McDonald receives the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics for his research on neutrinos at the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory.
While in Stockholm, Dr. McDonald, the inaugural chair of the Gordon and Patricia Gray Chair in Particle Astrophysics, will participate in a number of official events during Nobel Week, including the award ceremony
from Thursday, December 10 at 10:30 a.m. (EST)
Monday, December 7
Press Conference 3:30 a.m. (EST)
Dr. McDonald and his fellow Nobel laureates took part in the Press conference with the Nobel Laureates in Physics and Chemistry and the Laureate in Economic Sciences 2015 from 3:30-5 a.m. EST.
The Canadian Embassy also hosted a luncheon, where Dr. McDonald was interviewed alongside Mats Sundin, former Toronto Maple Leafs captain, for Swedish radio.
- Check out photos of these events on the
- Like Dr. McDonald’s .
See also, ֱ Gazette
Tuesday, December 8
Lecture at 3:00 a.m. (EST)
Dr. McDonald delivered his Nobel lecture, “The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory: Observation of Flavour Change for Solar Neutrinos,” from 3:00 to 4:20 am EST.
Viewers can watch the lecture here, or on or .
- Dr. McDonald's 2015 Nobel Lecture in Physics - slides (PDF 9.2 MB)
- Dr. McDonald's 2015 Nobel Lecture in Physics - slides (PPT 7.2 MB)
Reception
Dr. McDonald also attended a special reception in his honour hosted by Kenneth Macartney, Canada's Ambassador to Sweden.
Pictured (right): Dr. Art McDonald, hockey great Börje Salming, Ambassador Kenneth Macartney, Principal Daniel Woolf
See also, ֱ Gazette
Wednesday, December 9
Luncheon and visit to Norra Real High School
Queen’s celebrated Dr. McDonald’s remarkable accomplishments at a luncheon.
Earlier in the day, he attended a meeting that included his co-recipient, Takaaki Kajita of Japan, to prepare for the taping of Nobel Minds on Friday.
Dr. McDonald also visited Norra Real High School, the oldest upper-secondary school in Stockholm.
- Check out photos of these events on the
- Like Dr. McDonald’s
See also, ֱ Gazette
Thursday, December 10
Nobel Prize Ceremony
or find it on
Dr. McDonald and his fellow Nobel laureates formally received their Nobel Prizes from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden in a ceremony at the Stockholm Concert Hall.
Following the ceremony, the Nobel banquet was held in the Blue Hall at the Stockholm City Hall. Among the approximately 1,300 guests who attended the banquet are members of the SNO Collaboration and the Swedish Royal Family.
The ֱ community gathered to watch the ceremony in Stirling Hall! The Office of the Vice-Principal (Research) hosted a special celebration and viewing party (of the ceremony livetream) with the Department of Physics, Engineering Physics & Astronomy in Stirling Hall.
Friday, December 11
Nobel Minds
Nobel Minds is a a round-table discussion program with the current year's Nobel Laureates, co-produced by SVT and BBC WN, and broadcast on Swedish TV and BBC.
Nobel Prize in Physics videos:
See
- 2015 Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
- Dr. Art McDonald with Mats Sundin – an interview with Lena Nordlund fro Swedish radio. December 7, 2015, in Stockholm.
- Dr. Arthur B. McDonald's remarks at the Canadian Embassy in Sweden.
- A welcome to Dr. Art McDonald by Ambassador Ken Macartney. December 8, 2015, in Stockholm.
- 2015 Nobel Lectures in Physics. December 8, 2015, in Stockholm.
- Arthur McDonald: The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory: Observation of flavor change for solar neutrinos
- Arthur B. McDonald - Banquet Speech: ""Behind every success there is effort... passion... a courage to try."
- Congratulations Art McDonald (played at the in Grant Hall)
- In conversation with Art McDonald -- The Nobel Prize and Canadian research excellence by Universities Canada/Universités Canada
- Professor Arthur B. McDonald Co-recipient, 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics