Yoichiro Nambu (born January 18, 1921, Tokyo, Japan—died July 5, 2015, Ōsaka) was a Japanese-born American physicist who was awarded, with Kobayashi Makoto and Maskawa Toshihide, the 2008 Nobel Prize for Physics. Nambu received half of the prize for his discovery of spontaneous broken symmetry in subatomic physics, which explained why matter is much more common in the cosmos than antimatter. That theoretical research, which was mostly carried out in the 1950s, also helped earn him a share of Israel’s Wolf Prize in physics (1994/95).
After receiving an M.S. in 1942 from the University of Tokyo, Nambu worked as a professor at Ōsaka City University (1949–52). He received a doctorate in physics from the University of Tokyo in 1952, and that same year he went to the United States on the invitation of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. In 1954 he became a research associate at the University of Chicago, where he spent the remainder of his career, becoming associate professor (1956), professor (1958), and professor emeritus (1991).
Nambu was one of the founders of string theory, which models subatomic particles as tiny one-dimensional “stringlike” entities. He also was a pioneer in quantum chromodynamics, a field in which he first suggested that the gluon (in three “colours”: red, green, and blue) is the intermediary in carrying the strong force between quarks in nucleons.
Nambu became a U.S. citizen in 1970. He received many awards, including the U.S. National Medal of Science (1982) and the Dirac Medal of the International Centre for Theoretical Physics (1986). He was a member of both the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and an honorary member of the Japan Academy.