Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics
The Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics is an annual award established to honor transformative achievements in fundamental physics that deepen humanity's understanding of the universe.[1] Founded in 2012 by physicist and philanthropist Yuri Milner, it recognizes outstanding contributions from scientists working in theoretical, mathematical, or experimental domains, with a primary prize of $3 million that can be shared among multiple recipients.[1][2] Administered by the Breakthrough Prize Foundation, which Milner co-founded with his wife Julia, the prize operates through an open nomination process accessible to the public, followed by review from a selection committee comprising leading physicists such as Edward Witten and Nima Arkani-Hamed.[3] One main prize is awarded each year, alongside up to three New Horizons in Physics Prizes of $100,000 each for early-career researchers demonstrating exceptional promise.[2] Special Breakthrough Prizes, also valued at $3 million, may be granted at any time for extraordinary accomplishments outside the annual cycle.[2] Since its inception, the prize has celebrated pivotal discoveries that have reshaped physics, including the 2013 award to leaders of the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN—such as Peter Jenni, Fabiola Gianotti, and Guido Tonelli—for enabling the discovery of the Higgs boson, confirming the mechanism of mass generation.[4] Other landmark recipients include the 2016 Special Breakthrough Prize to the LIGO collaboration, led by Ronald W. P. Drever, Kip S. Thorne, and Rainer Weiss, for the first direct detection of gravitational waves, ushering in a new era of multi-messenger astronomy.[5] More recently, the 2025 prize was shared among over 13,000 researchers from the ATLAS, CMS, ALICE, and LHCb collaborations at CERN for their precise measurements of Higgs boson properties using Large Hadron Collider Run-2 data, advancing validation of the Standard Model and supporting the CERN & Society Foundation through prize funds for doctoral training.[6] These awards, often described as the highest monetary recognition in the field, have distributed tens of millions of dollars to laureates while highlighting physics' role in probing cosmic mysteries.[2]Background and Establishment
Founders and Initial Announcement
The Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics was established in 2012 by Yuri Milner, a physicist-turned-venture capitalist who founded the initiative through his Milner Foundation to celebrate profound contributions to the understanding of the universe. Milner, who holds an advanced degree in theoretical physics from Moscow State University, sought to support active researchers making transformative advances, providing them with substantial resources to continue their work unconstrained by typical funding limitations.[7][8] The prize's launch was announced on July 31, 2012, marking the creation of the Fundamental Physics Prize Foundation, a not-for-profit entity dedicated to administering the awards. This announcement simultaneously named the nine inaugural laureates—Nima Arkani-Hamed, Alan Guth, Alexei Kitaev, Maxim Kontsevich, Andrei Linde, Juan Maldacena, Giorgio Parisi, Ashoke Sen, and Edward Witten—for their groundbreaking work in areas such as cosmology, string theory, and quantum field theory, with each receiving $3 million. The event highlighted the prize's focus on both theoretical and experimental physics, aiming to recognize achievements that expand human knowledge of fundamental laws.[8][9] Milner's motivation stemmed from a desire to spotlight the field's recent triumphs, including the 2012 discovery of the Higgs boson at CERN's Large Hadron Collider, which validated decades of theoretical predictions and underscored physics' role in unraveling cosmic mysteries. By awarding prizes to mid-career scientists rather than retrospectively like the Nobel, the initiative intended to foster ongoing innovation, inspire young researchers, and promote public appreciation of physics through lectures and outreach. Milner described it as a way to affirm the enduring importance of fundamental science amid broader societal priorities.[8][10] In its early phase, the prize involved key figures such as Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg, who joined the board of directors to guide its direction. The inaugural laureates themselves formed the initial selection committee, ensuring peer-driven decisions. By 2014, the Fundamental Physics Prize was incorporated into the expanded Breakthrough Prize framework, supported by additional philanthropists including Julia Milner, Mark Zuckerberg, Priscilla Chan, Sergey Brin, Anne Wojcicki, Jack Ma, Cathy Zhang, and Reid Hoffman through the newly formed Breakthrough Prize Foundation, which broadened the initiative across multiple scientific domains.[8][11]Funding and Endowment
The Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics is supported entirely through private philanthropy from its founders' personal foundations, ensuring independence from public funding. Established in 2012 by physicist-turned-venture-capitalist Yuri Milner, the prize draws its primary funding from a dedicated grant by the Milner Foundation, co-founded by Milner and his wife, Julia Milner. Additional backing comes from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, established by Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, pediatrician Priscilla Chan, as well as contributions from Google co-founder Sergey Brin. These sources collectively underwrite the annual awards, reflecting a commitment to elevating recognition in fundamental physics. The main Breakthrough Prize carries a value of $3 million per laureate, which may be shared among multiple recipients in cases of collaborative work, a structure set at inception and unchanged as of 2025. Complementing this is the New Horizons in Physics Prize, valued at $100,000 each and awarded to up to three early-career researchers annually for significant contributions. Special Breakthrough Prizes, granted outside the standard nomination process for exceptional achievements, also total $3 million and can similarly be divided. While no formal inflation adjustments have been applied, the prize amounts have remained stable, allowing consistent scale in recognizing transformative work through 2025. This funding framework operates on a perpetual endowment model, where the founders' foundations provide ongoing grants to sustain the prizes indefinitely. Over its first 14 years, the Breakthrough Prize program—including physics, life sciences, and mathematics—has distributed more than $326 million in total awards, demonstrating the endowment's capacity for long-term viability without annual fundraising dependencies.Purpose and Criteria
Objectives and Scope
The Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics aims to recognize transformative contributions to the field, honoring both theoretical and experimental work that profoundly advances human understanding of the universe.[3] Established to celebrate major achievements, the prize highlights groundbreaking discoveries that reshape fundamental concepts in physics.[12] Its scope encompasses key areas such as particle physics, cosmology, quantum field theory, and closely related disciplines that maintain deep connections to core physical principles.[3] The prize places particular emphasis on high-risk, high-reward research, prioritizing recent developments that push the boundaries of knowledge from subatomic scales to galactic phenomena.[3] Beyond individual recognition, the prize seeks to inspire young scientists and underscore physics' essential role in addressing profound questions about the cosmos.[12] It distinguishes itself from awards like the Nobel Prize through its larger total monetary value of $3 million (which can be shared among multiple laureates if applicable)—compared to the Nobel's roughly $1 million (shared among up to three recipients)—which affords greater career flexibility, along with no restrictions based on nationality.[3]Eligibility and Nomination Guidelines
The Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics is open to scientists of any nationality worldwide, with no citizenship or institutional affiliation requirements for eligibility. For the main prize, there is no age limit, and it recognizes major achievements in fundamental physics, including new discoveries, theoretical advances, or instrumentation developments, with an emphasis on recent contributions though lifetime accomplishments may also be considered.[3] The New Horizons in Physics Prize, by contrast, targets early-career researchers who are generally no more than 12 years past their PhD at the time of nomination, though exceptions are made for participants in long-lead experimental projects; there is no strict age cap for this category either.[3] Nominations for all categories must be submitted by third parties, as self-nominations are not permitted, and can be made by any individual, including peers, colleagues, or institutions, through the official online portal on the Breakthrough Prize website.[3][13] A complete nomination requires basic biographical information on both the nominee and the nominator, at least one letter of recommendation from a third party, and up to 10 key citations from an academic publishing database, such as those highlighting the nominee's most impactful publications.[3] These materials should underscore the nominee's contributions to fundamental physics, focusing on their scientific impact and relevance to the prize's objectives of advancing deep understanding of the universe.[3] The nomination period typically opens in April and closes in early to mid-July each year; for instance, submissions for the 2026 prizes were accepted from April 15 to July 11, 2025.[13] Following closure, the selection process proceeds, with winners generally announced the following spring, around April, allowing time for committee review.[13] Special Breakthrough Prizes may be awarded outside this process in exceptional cases, without requiring nominations.[3]Award Structure
Main Breakthrough Prize
The Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics serves as the highest honor within the program, recognizing profound contributions to human understanding of the universe through transformative achievements in the field. Awarded annually since its inception, it honors individuals or teams for major lifetime accomplishments or recent breakthroughs in areas such as quantum mechanics, particle physics, cosmology, and astrophysics, with a primary focus on established researchers whose work has had lasting impact.[1] The prize carries a total value of $3 million, which is divided equally among co-laureates if shared, and it may be awarded posthumously to acknowledge enduring legacies. This financial award underscores the program's commitment to supporting fundamental research without restrictions on nationality or affiliation, emphasizing discoveries that address deep mysteries of the cosmos. For large collaborations, the prize may be shared among many recipients, with funds sometimes allocated to support related initiatives.[1][3]New Horizons in Physics Prize
The New Horizons in Physics Prize recognizes early-career researchers who have made significant contributions to fundamental physics or closely related fields with deep connections to physics.[3] Awarded annually since 2013, it aims to honor promising scientists who have already produced important work, fostering the next generation of talent in the field.[14] Up to three individuals or teams may receive the prize each year, distinguishing it from the larger main Breakthrough Prize by focusing on emerging rather than established achievements.[2] Each recipient receives $100,000, providing financial support to early-career physicists to advance their research.[3] Eligibility targets researchers generally no more than 12 years past their PhD, though exceptions are made for long-lead-time experimental projects or other circumstances.[3] There are no age restrictions, and the prize can be shared among collaborators or awarded multiple times to the same individual.[3] The prize encompasses a broad scope within physics, including theoretical advancements, condensed matter physics, and emerging areas such as quantum information science.[2] For instance, it has recognized work on quantum field theory techniques and novel phases of matter, highlighting innovative ideas with potential for long-term impact.[3] Nominations are open to the public and evaluated by the Breakthrough Prize Foundation's selection committee, ensuring a rigorous process for identifying rising stars.[15]Special and Additional Prizes
The Special Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics serves as an ad hoc award, distinct from the annual prizes, to recognize extraordinary, paradigm-shifting achievements that may not align with the standard nomination and selection timeline.[2] These prizes are typically $3 million and can be awarded to individuals, small teams, or large collaborations for recent breakthroughs or lifetime contributions that profoundly advance understanding of the universe.[5] Unlike the regular Breakthrough Prize, specials are initiated by the foundation in response to landmark events, emphasizing rapid acknowledgment of transformative work.[16] One prominent example is the 2016 Special Breakthrough Prize awarded to the LIGO and Virgo collaborations for the first direct detection of gravitational waves, confirming a key prediction of general relativity and opening a new era in observational astronomy.[5] The $3 million was distributed among over 1,000 scientists and engineers involved in the project, highlighting the prize's capacity to honor collective efforts in experimental physics.[17] Similarly, in 2018, the prize went to Jocelyn Bell Burnell for her 1967 discovery of pulsars, despite her earlier oversight for the Nobel Prize; she donated the full $3 million to support diversity in physics through scholarships for underrepresented groups.[16] Other specials have celebrated theoretical milestones, such as the 2019 award to Sergio Ferrara, Daniel Z. Freedman, and Peter van Nieuwenhuizen for developing supergravity in 1976, a theory unifying general relativity and supersymmetry that influenced modern particle physics and string theory research ($1 million each).[18] In 2020, Steven Weinberg received a special prize for his pioneering work on electroweak unification and quantum field theory, underscoring lifetime impact beyond recent discoveries.[19] More recently, the 2025 Special Breakthrough Prize honored Gerard 't Hooft for his foundational contributions to quantum chromodynamics, gauge theories, and the holographic principle, advancing the reconciliation of quantum mechanics with gravity.[6] An early instance was the 2013 Special Breakthrough Prizes awarded separately to leaders of the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN, as well as to LHC project coordinator Lyn Evans, for their roles in the discovery of the Higgs boson at CERN, which elucidated the mechanism for particle mass generation ($3 million each).[20] These awards follow a similar nomination process to the main prize but are reserved for exceptional cases, often involving large-scale experiments or overlooked historical contributions.[3] Among additional prizes, the Physics Frontiers Prize, introduced in 2012 as a $100,000 award for early-career physicists making significant advances, was discontinued after 2015 and its scope merged into the New Horizons in Physics Prize to streamline recognition of emerging talent.[2] No dedicated variants, such as those bridging physics and climate science, have been established as of 2025.[11]Selection and Administration
Review Process
The review process for the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics commences with an annual open nomination period, during which members of the public worldwide—excluding the nominees themselves—may submit candidates via an online portal.[3] A complete nomination requires detailed biographical information on both the nominee and nominator, at least one independent third-party letter of recommendation, and up to ten relevant citations drawn from a designated academic database, ensuring the submission highlights the candidate's key contributions.[3] Following the close of nominations, typically in mid-summer (for example, July 11, 2025, for the 2026 prizes), the submissions undergo evaluation by the Selection Committee, a body composed exclusively of prior Breakthrough Prize laureates in fundamental physics.[3][13] This committee conducts a thorough assessment of each nomination, prioritizing transformative achievements that have reshaped understanding in fundamental physics, such as breakthroughs in theoretical, experimental, or mathematical domains, with particular emphasis on recent developments that demonstrate originality and lasting impact.[3] The process emulates rigorous peer review, leveraging the committee's expertise to deliberate on the nominations' merits, though specific internal workflows remain confidential to maintain fairness.[21] The evaluation focuses on conceptual depth and field-wide influence rather than exhaustive metrics, soliciting insights through the provided recommendation letters that serve as peer endorsements from subfield experts.[3] Conflicts of interest are managed through standard recusal protocols, allowing committee members to abstain from discussions involving personal or institutional connections, while elements of anonymity in initial reviews help mitigate biases where feasible.[3] Final decisions culminate in the selection of up to one primary laureate (or shared among collaborators) for the main $3 million prize, alongside up to three recipients for the $100,000 New Horizons Prize targeting early-career physicists, with announcements generally made the following spring, such as in April.[2][13] In exceptional circumstances, the committee may award a Special Breakthrough Prize outside the standard timeline, bypassing the nomination phase entirely.[3]Selection Committee and Governance
The Selection Committee for the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics consists of eminent physicists who are past recipients of the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics or the New Horizons in Physics Prize. These individuals are invited to serve on the committee, which is tasked with selecting future laureates in the field.[3] The committee originated in 2012, when the prize was founded and nine inaugural laureates were named, forming the initial panel: Nima Arkani-Hamed, Alan Guth, Alexei Kitaev, Maxim Kontsevich, Andrei Linde, Juan Maldacena, Nathan Seiberg, Ashoke Sen, and Edward Witten.[8] This structure was designed to leverage the expertise of leading figures in theoretical, mathematical, and experimental physics to guide subsequent awards. As more prizes have been awarded, the committee has grown to incorporate additional past winners, maintaining a panel of recognized experts. For instance, the committee for the 2025 prizes included members such as Eric Adelberger, Nima Arkani-Hamed, Charles H. Bennett, Charles L. Bennett, Sheperd Doeleman, Michael B. Green, and Ewine F. van Dishoeck.[22] Governance of the committee falls under the Breakthrough Prize Foundation, a nonprofit organization that administers the prizes across categories. The foundation's board of directors provides oversight, with Huda Yahya Zoghbi serving as chair, alongside members including Anne Wojcicki, Mark Zuckerberg, and Yuri Milner.[23] Pete Worden also holds the position of chairman of the foundation, contributing to its strategic direction.[24] The committee's selections for the main prize and New Horizons Prize occur annually following a nomination period, while special prizes may be awarded at any time by the panel for exceptional contributions.[3]Laureates
List of Laureates
The Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, established in 2012, recognizes profound advancements in the field through annual awards, often shared among individuals or large collaborations, resulting in thousands of laureates by 2025.[1]| Year | Laureates | Affiliation(s) | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Nima Arkani-Hamed, Alan Guth, Alexei Kitaev, Maxim Kontsevich, Juan Maldacena, Nathan Seiberg, Ashoke Sen, Edward Witten | Institute for Advanced Study (multiple), MIT, Caltech, IHES France, Harish-Chandra Research Institute India | For profound contributions to understanding the early universe, quantum gravity, string theory, and quantum information science.[8] |
| 2013 | Alexander Polyakov | Princeton University | For groundbreaking research in field theory and string theory, including confinement and duality.[25] |
| 2013 (Special) | Peter Jenni, Fabiola Gianotti (ATLAS); Michel Della Negra, Tejinder S. Virdee, Guido Tonelli, Joe Incandela (CMS); Lyn Evans (LHC) | CERN (various collaborations) | For leadership in the discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider.[4] |
| 2013 (Special) | Stephen Hawking | University of Cambridge | For theoretical discoveries illuminating the nature of black holes and the origin of the universe.[26] |
| 2014 | Michael B. Green, John H. Schwarz | University of Cambridge, Caltech | For construction of the theory of superstring theory, uniting gravity with particle physics.[27] |
| 2014 (Special) | Andrei Linde | Stanford University | For development of the inflationary model of the universe.[27] |
| 2015 | Saul Perlmutter and Supernova Cosmology Project; Brian P. Schmidt, Adam G. Riess, and High-Z Supernova Search Team | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (lead), Australian National University, Johns Hopkins University (leads), and team members (~50 per project) | For discovery of the accelerating expansion of the universe, leading to the concept of dark energy.[28] |
| 2016 | Arthur B. McDonald (SNO), Takaaki Kajita, Yoichiro Suzuki (Super-Kamiokande), Atsuto Suzuki (KamLAND), Koichiro Nishikawa (K2K/T2K leaders), Kam-Biu Luk (Daya Bay) and collaboration members (~1,300 total across teams) | Queen's University/Sudbury Neutrino Observatory, University of Tokyo/Super-Kamiokande, Tohoku University/KamLAND, KEK/T2K, UC Berkeley/China (Daya Bay) | For discovery of neutrino oscillations, establishing neutrinos have mass.[29] |
| 2016 (Special) | Ronald W. P. Drever, Kip S. Thorne, Rainer Weiss (LIGO founders) and over 1,000 contributors | Caltech, MIT | For invention and realization of LIGO, enabling direct detection of gravitational waves.[5] |
| 2016 (Special) | Frans Pretorius, Luis Lehner, Harald P. Pfeiffer (numerical relativity) | Princeton University, Perimeter Institute, Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics | For development of numerical relativity simulations of black hole mergers.[5] |
| 2017 | Joseph Polchinski, Andrew Strominger, Cumrun Vafa | Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, Harvard University | For discovering that black holes have entropy inversely proportional to their horizon area, resolving the information paradox. (From 2016 announcement for 2017 prizes) |
| 2018 | Charles L. Bennett, Gary Hinshaw, Norman Jarosik, Lyman Page Jr., David N. Spergel, and WMAP science team (~30 members) | Johns Hopkins University, University of British Columbia, Princeton University (leads) | For precise measurements of cosmic microwave background anisotropies from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, establishing the standard model of cosmology.[30] |
| 2019 | Charles L. Kane, Eugene J. Mele | University of Pennsylvania | For prediction of topological insulators and other topological phases of matter.[31] |
| 2019 (Special) | Jocelyn Bell Burnell | University of Oxford | For discovery of the first radio pulsars, providing powerful new observational tools for astrophysics.[31] |
| 2020 | Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration (347 members, including Sheperd Doeleman as lead) | Harvard University/Smithsonian (lead), international institutions | For production of the first image of a black hole using global millimeter-wave observations.[32] |
| 2021 | Eric G. Adelberger, Jens H. Gundlach, Blayne R. Heckel | University of Washington | For precision tests of the inverse-square law of gravity and equivalence principle at short distances, constraining extra dimensions.[33] |
| 2021 (Special) | Steven Weinberg | University of Texas at Austin | For contributions to electroweak unification, quantum field theory, and understanding the early universe.[33] |
| 2022 | Hidetoshi Katori, Jun Ye | University of Tokyo, NIST/JILA University of Colorado | For invention and development of optical lattice clocks, enabling unprecedented time and frequency measurements.[34] |
| 2023 | Charles H. Bennett, Gilles Brassard, David Deutsch, Peter W. Shor | University of Waterloo, Université de Montréal, University of Oxford, MIT | For foundational advances in quantum information science, including quantum cryptography, computation, and algorithms.[35] |
| 2024 | John L. Cardy, Alexander B. Zamolodchikov | University of Oxford, Stony Brook University | For profound insights into quantum conformal field theory and statistical mechanics, revolutionizing understanding of critical phenomena.[36] |
| 2025 | ATLAS Collaboration (5,345 members), CMS Collaboration (4,550 members), ALICE Collaboration (1,869 members), LHCb Collaboration (1,744 members) | CERN (international collaborations) | For contributions to particle physics through analyses of Large Hadron Collider Run-2 data (2015–2024), advancing knowledge of fundamental particles and forces.[6] |
| 2025 (Special) | Gerard 't Hooft | Utrecht University | For fundamental insights into gauge theory and the standard model.[6] |