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British scientist to feature on new 拢50 note - but which one?

Governor Mark Carney says the figure could come from any field of science and expects them to be deceased for at least 20 years.

The new 拢50 note will feature a prominent British scientist
Image: The new 拢50 note will feature a prominent British scientist
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The new 拢50 note will feature a British scientist to celebrate the country's scientific heritage, the Bank of England has announced.

The public are being asked to submit nominations and can submit their suggestions until 14 December.

Governor Mark Carney said the figure could come from any field of science, but "I have ruled out economists".

The current £50 note features steam-engine pioneers Matthew Boulton and James Watt.

There is no shortage of individuals to nominate - from physicist Stephen Hawking, who died in March, to Dorothy Hodgkin, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1964.

Stephen Hawking could be in the running to appear on the new 拢50
Image: Stephen Hawking is in the running to appear on the new 拢50

Ada Lovelace, a 19th century mathematician known as the "grandmother of computing", is also an early frontrunner.

Although the bank expects candidates to have been deceased for at least 20 years, it said Hawking would still be eligible and anticipated receiving nominations for him.

More from UK

Bank of England Governor Mark Carney speaks during the announcement of the new polymer 拢50 note, at the Science Museum
Image: Governor Mark Carney speaks during the announcement of the new polymer 拢50 note

A new £10 note with author Jane Austen went into circulation last year and a £20 note featuring artist JMW Turner will be produced in 2020.

The UK's highest-denomination note is the last to be redesigned and switched from paper to polymer to make them harder to counterfeit.

A committee will create a shortlist from the public's recommendations and Mr Carney will make the final choice next year.

The bank says the individual must be dead, and real - to avoid a repeat of the process that saw the public choose "Boaty McBoatface" for a new research ship.