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Why did Kenichi Tanaka, an electrical engineer of an instrument manufacturing company in Japan win the Nobel Prize?
Koichi Tanaka, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, is an electrical engineer who works for a local instrument manufacturing company in Japan. He is neither a professor nor a master's doctor. He just graduated from electrical engineering. Before winning the prize, he didn't publish any papers at all, but in that year, he opened up a new world in the field of chemistry, won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in one fell swoop, and made great achievements in biomacromolecule mass spectrometry.

When the media reported this man, even colleagues and friends around Kenichi Tanaka were surprised because he was unknown before. Think of people in their forties who have been working as pawns in enterprises. Many young colleagues have been promoted and raised. He is still the chief researcher, but no matter how ordinary his position is, he has never given up on himself. On the contrary, he worked harder and did his duty.

? From Tanaka's experience, it is not difficult to see that an ordinary engineer, a diaosi with no chemical background and no chemical research, can become popular all over the world overnight, which really deserves our deep thought. The inspirational story of Kenichi Tanaka is a counter-attack story of a Nobel Prize winner in chemistry.

In fact, in life, he had never been in love before the age of 35, even failed in many subjects in college, and failed for two years in a row, which was once rated as the greatest miracle in history by the teacher. But no matter how you treat him, he just lives without saying a word and insists on his own persistence. Not to mention winning the Nobel Prize, he can make a small breakthrough in his work. Maybe he was satisfied, but in this case, he became the darling of God and interpreted the biggest legend in the history of the Nobel Prize.