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  1. Didier Queloz nel 2017. Premio Wolf per la fisica 2017. Premio Nobel per la fisica 2019. Didier Patrick Queloz ( Ginevra, 23 febbraio 1966 [1]) è un astronomo svizzero, co-scopritore di 51 Pegasi b, il primo esopianeta in orbita attorno a una stella di sequenza principale .

  2. Didier Patrick Queloz FRS (French pronunciation: [didje kəlo, kelo]; born 23 February 1966) is a Swiss astronomer. He is the Jacksonian Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of Cambridge , [1] where he is also a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge , as well as a professor at the University of Geneva . [2]

    • First person to find a planet orbiting a Sun-like star outside of our solar system
    • Swiss
  3. Prof. Dr. Didier Queloz. Full Professor at the Department of Physics. Head of Centre for Origin and Prevalence of Life. ETH Zürich. Inst. f. Teilchen- und Astrophysik. HIT J 22.3. Wolfgang-Pauli-Str. 27. 8093 Zürich. Switzerland. phone +41 44 633 74 50. phone +41 44 632 42 21 (Sec.) email dqueloz@ethz.ch. call_made 0000-0002-3012-0316.

  4. Didier Queloz is Professor of Physics at the Cavendish Laboratory and Geneva University. He is at the origin of the exoplanet revolution in astrophysics. Until recently, the Solar System has provided us with the only basis for our knowledge of planets and life in the universe.

  5. Didier Queloz. The Nobel Prize in Physics 2019. Born: 23 February 1966, Geneva, Switzerland. Affiliation at the time of the award: University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland; University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Prize motivation: “for the discovery of an exoplanet orbiting a solar-type star” Prize share: 1/4.

  6. On 20 April 2023, Didier Queloz, Nobel Laureate in Physics 2019 and President of the Marcel Benoist Foundation, was awarded the Insignia of Knight of the National Order of the Legion of Honour by H.E.M. Frédéric Journès, the French Ambassador to Switzerland. 30.06.2023. Exoplanets Group.

  7. Biographical. D idier Queloz is a professor of physics at the University of Cambridge’s Cavendish Laboratory and professor of astronomy at the University of Geneva (part time). He is one of the originators of the “exoplanet revolution” in astrophysics.