I sort of agree in principle but in practise they've always taken a broad view.
Kissinger was one of the most prominent disrupters of world peace in the postwar era but that didn't stop him winning the peace prize. Churchill won the literature prize for defeating Hitler. The blue led guys a few years back didn't do much except make a thing that would go on every single consumer gadget and disrupt my sleep but they won the physics prize.
Even when they get it right they often get it wrong. For example I believe Einstein supposedly won for "especially his work on the photoelectric effect" rather than relativity.
Einstein’s work on the photoelectric effect was incredibly important, and incredibly influential on other research at the time. He proposed that light was quantised - essentially the foundation of quantum mechanics.
It’s no exaggeration that Einstein’s work on the photoelectric effect was as important as special or general relativity, and it had the advantage of strong experimental verification by 1921.
The main reason that prize is remarkable is that Einstein himself hated quantum mechanics - but that doesn’t dispute the work’s importance.
The discovery of the photoelectric effect was certainly as important as relativity in terms of how much it affects society. But it was only an incremental advanced on top of Planck work on blackbody radiation.
I'm not saying that photoelectric effect didn't deserve a Nobel Prize. But relativity completely supplanted Newtonian Physics, and Einstein played a much greater role in this revolution than he did in that of Quantum Mechanics.
Also, I believe historical records have made it clear that relativity, even if it was still considered controversial in the '20s (and so not mentioned specifically), was indeed part of the reason he was awarded the prize.
Also, consider WHY it was still controversial, despite evidence piling up even for relativity. It was seen as such a fundamental shift away from common-sense understanding of the physical world that people refused to believe it, despite evidence.
Just like how many people to this day do not believe it's possilbe to build AI out of regular computers, as their intuition tells them that some magic vodoo needs to be there for "true" inteligence.
I would add to this that it had the advantage of something like 40 years of history as a field that was the basis for some of the biggest advances in instrumentation of that era.
Also, the prize is about the greatest benefit to humankind according to Alfred Nobel, not the most impressive research. Arguably, the photoelectric effect fits that notion better than GR or any other of Einstein's research.
Besides that, Einstein received the prize in 1921, whereas the Eddington experiment in 1919 generally counts as the first experimental verification of GR.
> Arguably, the photoelectric effect fits that notion better than GR or any other of Einstein's research
Today we could argue about it due to the importance of solar panels, but that was hard to forecast in 1921. Also, without GR there would be no GPS so it's not like it doesn't bring benefits to humanity.
Einstein laid the foundation of quantum mechanics with his description of the photoelectric effect, so you could add transistors, lasers, LEDs, CCD sensors and more to the list. Although I agree that it's doubtful that most of this could have been foreseen then.
Surely they would have just noticed a discrepancy in timing and added a few circles-upon-circles to effectively fix it up? Is deeply grokking relativity necessary for GPS to work?
On the other hand, it would be impossible to make those adjustments without someone coming up with GR :-)
More to the point, photoemission spectroscopy has been a workhorse tool for understanding the electronic properties of materials for quite a long time now (though perhaps not yet in 1921).
Nobel prizes are generally awarded for verifiable observations but, also require real world applications.
Einstein won the physics prize on the photoelectric effect due to having real world applications and observable and if GPS actually existed while he was arrived (yes I know this is a stretch) he would have gotten it for relativity.
Blue LEDs allows you to access more of the color spectrum for LEDs in general and they were not easy to make.
For this year it does feel like a very large leaning into practical applications instead of physics though. Did we run out of interesting physics in the last year?
The Nobel peace prize was a mistake. Peace is not a science, and you can't objectively measure how much anyone has helped peace, especially not before a few decades has passed.
So I agree that the peace prize committee has made some bad choices, but they do have an impossible job.
I'm sure they are but they drive me nuts. If I ever become filthy rich and in doing so sell my soul and become a bad person, one of my priorities will doubtless be to have the blue led inventors hunted down remorselessly.[1]
[1] Note to future law-enforcement: I am honestly kidding. I wouldn't hurt a fly, officer.
A black sharpie over the offending led indicators will fix that. Now you can enjoy your sleep uninterrupted by dreams of manhunts and mephistophelian bargains.
Kissinger was one of the most prominent disrupters of world peace in the postwar era but that didn't stop him winning the peace prize. Churchill won the literature prize for defeating Hitler. The blue led guys a few years back didn't do much except make a thing that would go on every single consumer gadget and disrupt my sleep but they won the physics prize.
Even when they get it right they often get it wrong. For example I believe Einstein supposedly won for "especially his work on the photoelectric effect" rather than relativity.