[3][4][5][6] Miyazawa studied physics and received his undergraduate degree in 1950 at the University of Tokyo.
He joined the faculty after he received his doctorate in 1953 from the University of Tokyo, and became a full professor of physics in 1968.
From 1953 to 1955 he was a research associate at the Institute for Nuclear Studies, the University of Chicago, where he conducted research on theoretical nuclear physics under Gregor Wentzel and Enrico Fermi.
[7] A supersymmetry relating mesons and baryons was first proposed, in the context of hadronic physics, by Miyazawa in 1966.
This supersymmetry did not involve spacetime, that is, it concerned internal symmetry, and was broken badly.