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Photos: 2024 Nobel winners with MIT ties honored in Stockholm

Laureates participated in various Nobel Week events, including lectures, a concert, a banquet, and the Nobel ceremony on Dec. 10.
Audience view of the stage for the Nobel Prize ceremony
Caption:
The 2024 Nobel Prize award ceremony was held in Stockholm, Sweden, on Dec. 10.
Credits:
Photo: Nanaka Adachi/Nobel Prize Outreach

MIT-affiliated winners of the 2024 Nobel Prizes were celebrated in Stockholm, Sweden, as part of Nobel Week, which culminated with a grand Nobel ceremony on Dec. 10.

This year’s laureates with MIT ties include Daron Acemoglu, an Institute Professor, and Simon Johnson, the Ronald A. Kurtz Professor of Entrepreneurship, who together shared the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, along with James Robinson of the University of Chicago, for their work on the relationship between economic growth and political institutions. MIT Department of Biology alumnus Victor Ambros ’75, PhD ’79 also shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Gary Ruvkun, who completed his postdoctoral research at the Institute alongside Ambros in the 1980s. The two were honored for their discovery of MicroRNA.

The honorees and their invited guests took part in a number of activities in Stockholm during this year’s Nobel Week, which began Dec. 5 with press conferences and a tour of special Nobel Week Lights around the city. Lectures, a visit to the Nobel Prize Museum, and a concert followed.

Per tradition, the winners received their medals from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden on Dec. 10, the anniversary of the death of Alfred Nobel. (Winners of the Nobel Peace Prize were honored on the same day in Oslo, Norway.)

At least 105 MIT affiliates — including faculty, staff, alumni, and others — have won Nobel Prizes, according to MIT Institutional Research. Photos from the festivities appear below.

Victor Ambros and Candy Lee delight at seeing a rail decorated with lights at night in Stockholm
Victor Ambros ’75, PhD ’79 and Rosalind “Candy” Lee ’76 take in the Nobel Week Lights around Stockholm. Lee was a co-author on one of the 1993 microRNA papers for which Ambros won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Photo: Benoît Derrier/Nobel Prize Outreach

Daron Acemoglu holds up a black chair to show the bottom, which is signed with various Nobel laureates' signatures
MIT Institute Professor Daron Acemoglu signs a chair at the Nobel Prize Museum.
Photo: Clément Morin/Nobel Prize Outreach

Victor Ambros and Gary Ruvkun pose for a portrait photo indoors
Medicine laureates Victor Ambros and Gary Ruvkun
Photo: Clément Morin/Nobel Prize Outreach

Daron Acemoglu speaks at a lectern
Daron Acemoglu delivers his Nobel Prize lecture on Dec. 8 at the Aula Magna, Stockholm University.
Photo: Anna Svanberg/Nobel Prize Outreach

Simon Johnson shakes the hand of King Carl of Sweden during the Nobel Prize ceremony
MIT Professor Simon Johnson receives his Nobel Prize from H.M. King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden at the Konserthuset in Stockholm on Dec. 10.
Photo: Nanaka Adachi/Nobel Prize Outreach

Simon Johnson's Nobel Prize diploma, which features an image of a construction site at left and a citation in calligraphy at right
Simon Johnson's Nobel Prize diploma
Photo: Dan Lepp/Nobel Prize Outreach. Artist: Elisabeth Biström. Calligrapher: Marie A. Györi. Book binder: Leonard Gustafssons Bokbinderi AB

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