<p>This is what it's like to get 'the call' — the Swedish Academy of Sciences ringing you up to say you won the Nobel Prize.</p>.<p>It's usually a dream-of-a-lifetime call that only the special few get in private. But for American physicist John Clauser, who was awarded the Nobel for his work on quantum mechanics, it rang a little different.</p>.<p>Thanks to a three-hour delay from a phone busy with congratulations and reporters' queries, the call finally got through to him while he was on a live Zoom interview with The Associated Press. And he shared his side of the notification and celebration.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/bertozzi-meldal-sharpless-awarded-nobel-prize-in-chemistry-1150870.html" target="_blank">Bertozzi, Meldal, Sharpless awarded Nobel Prize in Chemistry</a></strong></p>.<p>“Oh hang on. They're on the phone right now," he said. "OK. Hang on just a second. Can I talk to the guys from the Swedish Nobel Committee?”</p>.<p>Over the next nine minutes, Clauser recounted to the Swedish Academy the difficult road that eventually led to a Nobel-awarding phone call — albeit a few hours late.</p>.<p>While studying at Columbia in the 1960s, Clauser became interested in designing practical experiments to put quantum mechanics to the test. But his ideas weren't always well-received in the field, he said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/alain-aspect-john-f-clauser-anton-zeilinger-win-nobel-prize-in-physics-1150664.html" target="_blank">Alain Aspect, John F Clauser, Anton Zeilinger win Nobel Prize in Physics</a></strong></p>.<p>Leading physicist Richard Feynman, who won his own physics Nobel in 1965, “kind of threw me out of his office,” Clauser said. “He was very offended that I should even be considering the possibility that quantum mechanics might not give the correct predictions.”</p>.<p>But Clauser said he was having fun working on these experiments and thought they were important — “even though everybody told me I was crazy and was going to ruin my career by doing it."</p>.<p>While continuing his work at University of California Berkeley, he and the late physicist Stuart Freedman “had to build everything from scratch. There was very little money so I was basically cobbling together junk or scrap from the UC physics department,” he told the Academy.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/svante-p-bo-awarded-nobel-prize-in-medicine-1150410.html" target="_blank">Svante Pääbo awarded Nobel Prize in Medicine</a></strong></p>.<p>“There's a lot of stuff unused in storerooms,” Clauser said. “I would rummage around and say, Oh, hey, I can use this.'”</p>.<p>Some of the great physicists of the past scavenged the same way, he pointed out.</p>.<p>And those experiments, with all their backlash and scraped-together budgets, were the very reason he was on the phone with the Swedish Academy decades later.</p>.<p>As the call wrapped up, there was the matter of logistics. Clauser asked the Academy about when he would “get some dates and times on what I'm expected to do.”</p>.<p>Of course, there's something you definitely have to say to the Academy when it calls: “Thanks a lot.”</p>
<p>This is what it's like to get 'the call' — the Swedish Academy of Sciences ringing you up to say you won the Nobel Prize.</p>.<p>It's usually a dream-of-a-lifetime call that only the special few get in private. But for American physicist John Clauser, who was awarded the Nobel for his work on quantum mechanics, it rang a little different.</p>.<p>Thanks to a three-hour delay from a phone busy with congratulations and reporters' queries, the call finally got through to him while he was on a live Zoom interview with The Associated Press. And he shared his side of the notification and celebration.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/bertozzi-meldal-sharpless-awarded-nobel-prize-in-chemistry-1150870.html" target="_blank">Bertozzi, Meldal, Sharpless awarded Nobel Prize in Chemistry</a></strong></p>.<p>“Oh hang on. They're on the phone right now," he said. "OK. Hang on just a second. Can I talk to the guys from the Swedish Nobel Committee?”</p>.<p>Over the next nine minutes, Clauser recounted to the Swedish Academy the difficult road that eventually led to a Nobel-awarding phone call — albeit a few hours late.</p>.<p>While studying at Columbia in the 1960s, Clauser became interested in designing practical experiments to put quantum mechanics to the test. But his ideas weren't always well-received in the field, he said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/alain-aspect-john-f-clauser-anton-zeilinger-win-nobel-prize-in-physics-1150664.html" target="_blank">Alain Aspect, John F Clauser, Anton Zeilinger win Nobel Prize in Physics</a></strong></p>.<p>Leading physicist Richard Feynman, who won his own physics Nobel in 1965, “kind of threw me out of his office,” Clauser said. “He was very offended that I should even be considering the possibility that quantum mechanics might not give the correct predictions.”</p>.<p>But Clauser said he was having fun working on these experiments and thought they were important — “even though everybody told me I was crazy and was going to ruin my career by doing it."</p>.<p>While continuing his work at University of California Berkeley, he and the late physicist Stuart Freedman “had to build everything from scratch. There was very little money so I was basically cobbling together junk or scrap from the UC physics department,” he told the Academy.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/svante-p-bo-awarded-nobel-prize-in-medicine-1150410.html" target="_blank">Svante Pääbo awarded Nobel Prize in Medicine</a></strong></p>.<p>“There's a lot of stuff unused in storerooms,” Clauser said. “I would rummage around and say, Oh, hey, I can use this.'”</p>.<p>Some of the great physicists of the past scavenged the same way, he pointed out.</p>.<p>And those experiments, with all their backlash and scraped-together budgets, were the very reason he was on the phone with the Swedish Academy decades later.</p>.<p>As the call wrapped up, there was the matter of logistics. Clauser asked the Academy about when he would “get some dates and times on what I'm expected to do.”</p>.<p>Of course, there's something you definitely have to say to the Academy when it calls: “Thanks a lot.”</p>