Many students have passed away one year after the death of Masatoshi Koshiba, a special honorary professor at the University of Tokyo, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics and is known for raising many researchers as an excellent educator. The "Shinobu-kai" was held with the participation of others.

Masatoshi Koshiba, a special honorary professor at the University of Tokyo, won the Nobel Prize in Physics for his successful observation of the elementary particle "neutrino", but is also known for raising many researchers as an excellent educator. He died a year ago last November at the age of 94.



In the hall of the University of Tokyo, the researchers who received the guidance played a central role in holding a "Shinobu-kai" with Mr. Koshiba, and about 400 people including online participated.



A ghost was placed on the stage of the hall, and the people who studied under Mr. Koshiba talked about their memories.



Of these, Professor Emeritus Sakue Yamada of the University of Tokyo, who was instructed by Mr. Koshiba, who was in his thirties, said, "The word I heard when I first met was,'Keep the eggs of your research warm.' Success was said to be "lucky" by the people around me, but I think that while valuing past experiences and connections with people, I cultivated my intuition as a researcher and gained luck myself. " I was looking back.



Among Mr. Koshiba's students, there are many researchers who are still active internationally, such as Professor Takaaki Kajita of the University of Tokyo, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics, and the participants were honoring Mr. Koshiba as an educator. ..