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The Complete List of 1975 Nobel Prize Winners

Mid-1970s breakthroughs reshaped science, literature and international affairs, and the Nobel selections from 1975 reflect that mix of theoretical insight and real-world impact. This list aims to give a compact snapshot of the people and ideas the committee honored that year.

There are 12 1975 Nobel Prize Winners, ranging from Aage N. Bohr,Vladimir Prelog to laureates across disciplines. For each person, entries are organized with Category,Nationality,Citation so you can see the field, country and the committee wording at a glance — you’ll find below.

How are the entries organized and how should I read the columns?

Each entry shows the laureate’s Category (the prize field), Nationality (country associated with the winner) and the official Citation (the committee’s reason for the award). Use Category to group similar fields, Nationality to note geographic distribution, and Citation for the precise contribution recognized.

Where do the citation details come from and are they reliable?

Citations reproduce the committee’s official wording as published by the Nobel authorities; for primary verification or fuller context consult the Nobel Prize website and original press releases linked in the list below.

1975 Nobel Prize Winners

Name Category Nationality Citation
Aage N. Bohr Physics Denmark for the discovery of the connection between collective and particle motion in atomic nuclei
Ben Mottelson Physics Denmark for the discovery of the connection between collective and particle motion in atomic nuclei
James Rainwater Physics United States for the discovery of the connection between collective and particle motion in atomic nuclei
John Cornforth Chemistry United Kingdom for their work on stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions
Vladimir Prelog Chemistry Switzerland for their work on stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions
David Baltimore Physiology or Medicine United States for discoveries concerning interaction between tumour viruses and the genetic material
Renato Dulbecco Physiology or Medicine Italy for discoveries concerning interaction between tumour viruses and the genetic material
Howard M. Temin Physiology or Medicine United States for discoveries concerning interaction between tumour viruses and the genetic material
Eugenio Montale Literature Italy for his distinctive lyrical poetry interpreting human values
Andrei Sakharov Peace Soviet Union for his struggle for human rights and civil liberties in the USSR
Leonid Kantorovich Economic Sciences Soviet Union for their contributions to the theory of optimum allocation of resources
Tjalling C. Koopmans Economic Sciences United States for their contributions to the theory of optimum allocation of resources

Images and Descriptions

Aage N. Bohr

Aage N. Bohr

Danish nuclear physicist Aage Bohr helped show how individual nucleon motion and collective behaviors produce nuclear structure, working with Mottelson and Rainwater to explain atomic nuclei shapes and spectra. Their models transformed theoretical nuclear physics.

Ben Mottelson

Ben Mottelson

Ben Roy Mottelson, Danish-born theoretical physicist, collaborated with Aage Bohr and James Rainwater to link particle motion and collective effects in nuclei. His work clarified nuclear deformation and symmetry breaking, reshaping modern models of atomic structure.

James Rainwater

James Rainwater

American physicist James Rainwater proposed models where single-particle motion influences overall nuclear shape; experimental and theoretical follow-up confirmed connections between particles and collective nuclear behavior, providing a unifying framework for understanding nuclear spectra.

John Cornforth

John Cornforth

John Cornforth British chemist specialized in stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions, mapping how enzymes control three-dimensional arrangements in molecules. His meticulous structural and mechanistic studies illuminated biochemical synthesis and reaction specificity.

Vladimir Prelog

Vladimir Prelog

Vladimir Prelog, Swiss organic chemist born in Croatia, advanced stereochemistry and conformational analysis of organic molecules. He developed methods to determine absolute configuration and reaction mechanisms, impacting synthetic organic chemistry and pharmaceuticals.

David Baltimore

David Baltimore

David Baltimore, American molecular biologist, co-discovered reverse transcriptase in tumor viruses, revealing how viral RNA can be reverse-transcribed into DNA. This finding revolutionized virology and molecular biology, influencing cancer research and biotechnology.

Renato Dulbecco

Renato Dulbecco

Italian virologist Renato Dulbecco showed how tumor viruses integrate their genetic material into host DNA, clarifying viral causes of cancer. His experimental approaches linked virology with genetics and helped lay groundwork for cancer molecular biology.

Howard M. Temin

Howard M. Temin

Howard Temin, American geneticist, independently discovered reverse transcription and its role in tumor viruses, demonstrating RNA-to-DNA information flow. His insights challenged central dogma assumptions and guided research into viral oncogenesis.

Eugenio Montale

Eugenio Montale

Eugenio Montale, Italian poet and critic, wrote dense, introspective lyric poetry grappling with history, memory and human values. His evocative imagery and precise language made him a leading voice in postwar European literature.

Andrei Sakharov

Andrei Sakharov

Andrei Sakharov, Soviet physicist turned dissident, campaigned for human rights, civil liberties and political reform in the USSR. His outspoken criticism of repression and advocacy for civil freedoms led to international recognition and state retaliation.

Leonid Kantorovich

Leonid Kantorovich

Leonid Kantorovich, Soviet mathematician and economist, developed linear programming and mathematical methods for optimal resource allocation. His theoretical work provided tools for planning, operations research, industrial optimization, and modern economic analysis.

Tjalling C. Koopmans

Tjalling C. Koopmans

Tjalling Koopmans, Dutch-American economist, advanced activity analysis and optimal resource allocation theory, applying mathematical economics to transportation, production, and growth models. His work influenced economic planning and quantitative methods in policy-making.

Nobel Prize Winners in Other Years