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  1. Masatoshi Koshiba (1926-2020) was a Japanese physicist and Nobel laureate for his contributions to neutrino astronomy. He led the Kamiokande and Super-Kamiokande experiments that detected solar and supernova neutrinos, and resolved the solar neutrino problem.

  2. Nov 12, 2020 · Masatoshi Koshiba was a Japanese astrophysicist who proved the existence of cosmic neutrinos. He conducted his research at the University of Tokyo and died in 2020.

  3. Masatoshi Koshiba was a Japanese physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2002 for his contributions to neutrino physics. He was a professor at the University of Tokyo and a director of several international research centers. He died in 2020.

  4. Sep 15, 2024 · Koshiba Masatoshi was a Japanese physicist who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2002 for his detection of neutrinos from the Sun and a supernova. Learn about his life, education, and achievements in neutrino research and X-ray astronomy.

  5. Nov 16, 2020 · Masatoshi Koshiba, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2002 for studies of the ghostly cosmic particles known as neutrinos, died on Thursday in Edogawa Hospital in Tokyo. He was 94.

  6. Jan 22, 2021 · Masatoshi Koshiba, eminent experimental particle physicist, passed away on 12 November 2020. He was 94. By conducting electron–positron (e − –e +) collider experiments, Koshiba used his creativity to advance the field of particle physics.

  7. September 19, 1926: Masatoshi Koshiba, Pioneer of Neutrino Astronomy, is Born. By Julia Ostmann. Sept. 19, 2021. Tiny and chargeless, neutrinos leave barely a trace on their journey around the cosmos—elusive players in the hunt for dark matter, the study of our Sun, and the evolution of the atom.