A look at winners of 2014 Nobel Prize in chemistry

The Associated Press

WHO WON THE CHEMISTRY NOBEL?

Americans Eric Betzig, 54, at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Virginia, and William E. Moerner, 61, at Stanford University, California; and German Stefan Hell, 51, at the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Goettingen and the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg.

FOR WHAT?

For developing ways to dramatically improve the resolution of optical microscopes. This allowed scientists to overcome the theoretical maximum resolution of 200 nanometers that prevented researchers from seeing living cells or bacteria in ways that electron microscopes — which usually require cells to be killed — couldn’t.

SIGNIFICANCE

The Nobel committee says the work of the three scientists “has brought optical microscopy into the nano-dimension,” allowing the study of molecular processes in real time. This has helped improve our understanding of diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s and Parkinson’s, and even made visible the changes that take place in the brain when it learns something.

WHAT THEY SAID:

“I’m convinced that as a result of this discovery, as a result of the fact that we can see details at much higher spatial resolution, we will find out much quicker what is going on in the cell if a disease emerges,” Hell told the AP.

“We can tell whether (individual molecules are) different or whether they’re the same. It’s very much like asking whether they all march to the same drummer or not,” Moerner told the AP. “When you can watch one by one, then we are able to observe exactly when it changes from one state to another.”

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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