The year 2025 marks another milestone in the history of the Nobel Prize, as laureates across six categories — Physics, Chemistry, Physiology or Medicine, Literature, Peace, and Economic Sciences — were honoured for their exceptional contributions to science, humanism, culture and society. The recognition continues to reflect Alfred Nobel’s vision of rewarding work that “has conferred the greatest benefit on humankind.”
In this blog post, we will review each category’s winners, briefly explain why they were honoured, how their work matters (for exams and beyond) and suggest key take-aways you should note for revision.
Nobel Prize Winners 2025 – Quick Revision Table
| Category | Winner(s) | Country | Why Awarded (Key Points) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physics | John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret, John M. Martinis | UK, France, USA | Discovery of macroscopic quantum tunnelling and energy quantisation in electric circuits → foundation for quantum technologies. |
| Chemistry | Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson, Omar M. Yaghi | Japan, Australia, USA | Development of Metal–Organic Frameworks (MOFs) → porous materials for gas storage, catalysis, environmental applications. |
| Physiology/Medicine | Mary E. Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell, Shimon Sakaguchi | USA, USA, Japan | Discoveries on peripheral immune tolerance and regulatory T cells (Tregs) → crucial for autoimmune disease understanding. |
| Literature | László Krasznahorkai | Hungary | Visionary, powerful literary work exploring apocalyptic, philosophical themes and the resilience of art. |
| Peace | María Corina Machado | Venezuela | Efforts to promote democracy, human rights, and peaceful political transition in Venezuela. |
| Economic Sciences | Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion, Peter Howitt | USA, France/UK, USA | Work on technological progress, creative destruction, and prerequisites for sustained economic growth. |
🔰 Don’t Miss: List of Awards and Honours 2025: Month-wise Complete Notes
Ultra-Quick Mnemonics
- Physics: “Circuit goes Quantum – Clarke, Devoret, Martinis.”
- Chemistry: “MOF Masters – Kitagawa, Robson, Yaghi.”
- Medicine: “Immune Brakes – Brunkow, Ramsdell, Sakaguchi.”
- Literature: “Krasznahorkai – Vision in Chaos.”
- Peace: “Machado – Democracy for Venezuela.”
- Economics: “Innovation = Growth – Mokyr, Aghion, Howitt.”
1. Physics
Winners: John Clarke (UK), Michel H. Devoret (France), John M. Martinis (USA)

Award citation: “for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit.” (NobelPrize.org)
What it means:
- They demonstrated that quantum phenomena (such as tunnelling and quantised energy levels) — typically confined to the microscopic realm — can manifest in an electric circuit of a size you can hold.
- This work bridges the gap between the quantum world and classical electronics, paving the way for quantum technology, such as quantum computing, quantum sensors and quantum cryptography.
- Definition: Quantum tunnelling = particle/quantum wave’s ability to pass through a potential barrier that it classically shouldn’t. Energy quantisation = discrete allowed energy levels.
- Significance: Extends quantum mechanics from microscopic (electrons, atoms) to macroscopic circuits (superconducting circuits).
2. Chemistry
Winners: Susumu Kitagawa (Japan), Richard Robson (Australia), Omar M. Yaghi (USA)

Award citation: “for the development of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs).”
What that means:
- Metal-Organic Frameworks are materials made by linking metal ions or clusters with organic molecules to build porous, lattice-like structures.
- These frameworks have huge potential: storing gases (e.g., hydrogen, carbon dioxide), catalysing reactions, capturing atmospheric water, environmental cleanup.
Exam-relevance & key points:
- Term to recall: MOFs (Metal-Organic Frameworks) – think: “metal + organic linkers = huge pores”.
- Why awarded: Because it opens a new class of materials with wide applications (energy, environment, materials science).
3. Physiology or Medicine
Winners: Mary E. Brunkow (USA), Fred Ramsdell (USA), Shimon Sakaguchi (Japan)

Award citation: “for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance.”
What it means:
- The immune system has to discriminate “self” vs “non-self”. These researchers uncovered how regulatory T cells (Tregs) and related mechanisms keep immune responses in check in the body’s periphery (outside the thymus) so that the immune system does not attack one’s own organs.
- Their work is foundational for understanding and treating autoimmune diseases, organ transplant rejection, allergies, even cancer immunotherapy.
Exam-relevance & key points:
- Key term: Peripheral immune tolerance.
- Mechanism: Tregs (often express FOXP3) suppress other immune cells to prevent autoimmunity. Example: IPEX syndrome (immune dysregulation) is linked to FOXP3 mutation.
4. Literature
Winner: László Krasznahorkai (Hungary)

Award citation: “for his compelling and visionary oeuvre that, in the midst of apocalyptic terror, reaffirms the power of art.”
What it means:
- Krasznahorkai is known for dense, philosophical, often bleak-but-powerful prose, exploring themes of collapse, hope, human condition, history.
- His work is emblematic of how literature can speak to global conditions — societal anxiety, existential questions — yet remain deeply artistic.
Exam-relevance & key points:
- Remember: Hungarian writer; 2025 laureate; second Hungarian to win the literature prize.
- Themes: apocalypse, absurdity, art’s resilience.
5. Peace
Winner: María Corina Machado (Venezuela)

Award citation: “for her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy.”
What it means:
- She has been a vocal figure in opposition to authoritarianism in Venezuela, advocating for democracy, human rights and peaceful transition of power.
- The award underscores the global significance of civil society, democracy and individual courage in today’s world.
Exam-relevance & key points
- Country: Venezuela.
- Field: Democracy, human rights.
6. Economic Sciences
Winners: Joel Mokyr (USA), Philippe Aghion (France/UK), Peter Howitt (USA)

Award citation: “for having identified the prerequisites for sustained growth through technological progress” (Mokyr) and “for the theory of sustained growth through creative destruction” (Aghion & Howitt).
What it means:
- Mokyr’s work: historically and quantitatively analysing how technological and cultural factors fuel long-term economic growth.
- Aghion & Howitt: developed the creative destruction model — how innovation replaces old technologies, driving growth, but also disruption.
- Their combined contribution gives students of economics, policy and development a deeper grasp of why some economies grow faster than others, and the role of innovation.
Exam-relevance & key points:
- Terms: Technological progress, creative destruction.
- Significance: Moves beyond just “capital + labour” to innovation as a key input in growth.
Conclusion & Implications
Why 2025 matters:
- The physics and chemistry prizes emphasise frontiers: quantum phenomena in circuits; new materials for global challenges.
- The medicine prize highlights health/biology advances with direct societal impact (immune tolerance).
- Literature and Peace prizes reflect culture and values — art and democracy — reminding us that human progress is multi-dimensional.
- The economics prize underlines that innovation isn’t optional but central to future prosperity.
Tip: Create a table summarising all six categories, winners, citation, relevance. This is excellent for last-minute revision.