Just in 2002, Tanaka received a phone call. The person on the phone spoke English, and Tanaka only understood two words: congratulations and Nobel. At this time, Tanaka didn't know what had happened, and no acquaintances believed that Tanaka would have anything to do with the world-class prize. After all, in the eyes of many people, he is just an ordinary person.
Finally, a large number of reporters immediately surrounded Tanaka's studio. He also awkwardly walked onto the platform of the conference in his blue overalls for the experiment. At this time, the wife's untimely phone call came, and Ding's voice echoed in the venue. The flash didn't stop, but uncle answered the phone awkwardly. The embarrassing picture spread all over the country with the live broadcast, and the audience was amused by Tanaka. Tanaka was very angry. Not to mention grabbing headlines, social networking sites are discussing this "civilian scientist" enthusiastically. It turns out that such an ordinary middle-aged uncle has also become an inspirational model, inspiring Japan during the economic downturn.
But Tanaka himself fell into sorrow: he thought it was an accident and felt that he didn't deserve the prize at all. Tanaka won the prize for inventing "mass spectrometry of biological macromolecules". Simply put, adding glycerol as a buffer in Tanaka solved this problem. He said, first of all, because of the lack of professional theoretical knowledge, I don't know that macromolecules can't analyze like this; Secondly, he just accidentally poured glycerol in, because he was used to thrift, reluctant to throw it away and made a patent by mistake. ...
In fact, winning the Nobel Prize is not accidental, but also because of my wisdom and luck!