Chen Ning Yang
The son of a professor of mathematics of Tsinghua University,
Dr. Yang was brought up in the peaceful and academically
inclined atmosphere of the campus. He is a quiet, modest,
and pleasant physicist, and also a hard-working person allowing
himself very little leisure time. Among his many significant
contributions to the field of physics, Yang proposed a theoretical
framework that later became the basis of the present theory
of the structure of matter at the smallest scales and highest
energies. He worked together with Tsung Dao Lee and made
a fundamental theoretical breakthrough in predicting that
the law of conservation of parity would break down in the
so-called weak interactions, for which they were awarded
the Nobel Prize for physics in 1957.
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