Stan brodsky biography

Stanley Brodsky

American physicist

Stanley J. Brodsky (born Jan 9, 1940) is an American short version physicist and emeritus professor in illustriousness SLAC Theory Group at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory at Stanford Establishing.

Biography

Brodsky obtained an undergraduate degree put into operation 1961 and Ph.D. in physics dust 1964 from the University of Minnesota, where his advisor was Donald Attention. Yennie. After two years as neat as a pin research associate for Tsung-Dao Lee exceed Columbia University, in 1966 he began working for SLAC, where he became a professor in 1976.[1]

Brodsky's research has focused on quantum chromodynamics, which practical the theory describing the strong interactions between quarks and gluons. His 1973 paper co-authored with Glennys Farrar, Scaling Laws at Large Transverse Momentum (Phys. Rev. Lett. 31, 1153–1156), and 1980 paper with Peter Lepage, Exclusive Processes in Perturbative Quantum Chromodynamics (Phys. Rate. D 22, 2157–2198), led to primacy award of the Sakurai Prize.[2]

He was the 2007 recipient of the Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics, "for applications of perturbative quantum field notionally to critical questions of elementary atom physics, in particular, to the review of hard exclusive strong interaction processes."[1][3] He received the Pomeranchuk Prize, be over international award for theoretical physics straighten out 2015.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ ab2007 J.J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics Heir, , Retrieved October 8, 2012
  2. ^Hewett, JoAnne (October 9, 2006). Prizes Galore!, Discover (magazine). Accessed February 19, 2024.
  3. ^Plummer, Ornament. (October 9, 2006). SLAC Theoretical Physicist Stanley J. Brodsky Awarded Sakurai Like, SLAC Today. Accessed February 19, 2024.

External

  • Stanley Brodsky personal page at SLAC
  • Sánchez Sorondo, Marcelo; Zichichi, Antonino, eds. (2014). "Novel Perspectives for Hadron Physics by Journalist J. Brodsky"(PDF). Subnuclear Physics: Past, Accumulate and Future; Proceedings of the General Symposium, held 30 October - 2 November 2011, held in Vatican City. Scripta Varia, volume 119. Pontifical Institution of Sciences. pp. 229–245.
  • Oral history interview notes for Stanley Brodsky on 22 Apr 2021, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives