Anupam Garg | |
Fields: | Physics |
Birth Date: | 1956 8, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Amritsar, India |
Workplaces: | Northwestern University |
Doctoral Advisor: | N. David Mermin[1] |
Known For: | Leggett–Garg inequality |
Anupam Kumar Garg is a professor in the department of Physics & Astronomy at Northwestern University, Illinois. Anupam Kumar Garg was born on August 17, 1956 in Amritsar, India. He received his Ph.D. in 1983 from Cornell University. In 2012, he became a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS) thanks to his work on molecular magnetism and macroscopic quantum phenomena.
Garg is best known for formulating the Leggett–Garg inequality, named for Anthony James Leggett and himself, which is a mathematical inequality fulfilled by all macrorealistic physical theories.[2] He is also known for the Garg-Onuchic-Ambegaokar model of charge transfer.[3] In addition, he discovered the phenomenon of topological quenching of the tunnel splitting in a toy Hamiltonian for spin tunneling,[4] that was subsequently found experimentally in the magnetic molecule Fe8.[5] His current research interests center around coherent state path integrals, especially as they pertain to quantum and semi-classical phenomena associated with the orientation of quantum mechanical spin.
Garg is the author of a graduate physics textbook, Classical Electromagnetism in a Nutshell,[6] and an undergraduate text, Mathematics with a Scientific Sensibility.[7]