Moungi Bawendi wears a white tie tuxedo and delivers a talk behind a glamorous podium.

Moungi Bawendi honored during Nobel Week in Stockholm

Categories: Awards, Faculty, MIT News, Research

The professor of chemistry participated in various festivities, culminating in the Nobel Prize ceremony on Dec. 10.

The 2023 Nobel Prize winners received their awards in a grand ceremony yesterday in Stockholm, Sweden. Among those honored was MIT Professor Moungi Bawendi, who shared the 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Louis Brus and Aleksey Yekimov for their work on quantum dots.

As part of the annual Nobel Week festivities, Bawendi gave a lecture about his research, participated in a Nobel Banquet, and took part in a conversation with Danish European Space Agency astronaut Andreas Mogensen, a current crew member on the International Space Station. To mark the occasion, Morgensen showed off a floating Nobel Prize medal won previously by physicist Niels Bohr.

In his banquet speech, Bawendi stated: “Wondering about how the atomic world evolves into the macroscopic one inevitably leads us through a wonderful new world, the nano-world, which we now call the realm of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Quantum dots, for which we are being honored here today were at the birth of this new realm. They shine brightly on its future and the yet un-imagined possibilities it offers. So tonight, let us raise a toast to the human drive for exploration, and to the future of nanoscience.”

Below are several photos from Bawendi’s week in Stockholm.