Cumrun Vafa | |
Birth Date: | 1 August 1960 |
Birth Place: | Tehran, Iran |
Nationality: | Iranian-American |
Field: | Theoretical Physics |
Work Institution: | Harvard University |
Alma Mater: | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (BS) Princeton University (PhD) |
Doctoral Advisor: | Edward Witten |
Doctoral Students: | Freddy Cachazo Andrew Neitzke Eric Zaslow |
Known For: | F-theory Vafa–Witten theorem Gopakumar–Vafa invariant Mirror symmetry Swampland Weak gravity conjecture |
Awards: | Dirac Medal (2008) Eisenbud Prize (2008) Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics (2016) Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics (2017) Mustafa Prize (2021) |
Cumrun Vafa (Persian: کامران وفا, in Persian pronounced as /kɒːmˈrɒːn væˈfɒː/; born 1 August 1960) is an Iranian-American theoretical physicist and the Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at Harvard University.
Cumrun Vafa was born in Tehran, Iran on 1 August 1960.[1] He became interested in physics as a young child, specifically how the moon was not falling from the sky, and he later grew his interests in math by high school and was fascinated by how mathematics could predict the movement of objects.[2]
He graduated from Alborz High School in Tehran and moved to the United States in 1977 to study at university. He received a B.S. in mathematics and physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1981. He received his Ph.D. in physics from Princeton University in 1985 after completing a doctoral dissertation, titled "Symmetries, inequalities and index theorems", under the supervision of Edward Witten.[3]
After his PhD degree, Vafa became a junior fellow via the Harvard Society of Fellows at Harvard University, where he later got a junior faculty position. In 1989 he was offered a senior faculty position, and he has been there ever since.
Vafa worked at Princeton University within the Institute for Advanced Study, within the School of Natural Sciences and the School of Mathematics in 1994.[4] [5]
Vafa's research is primarily in string theory, and is focused on the nature of quantum gravity and the relation between geometry and quantum field theories.[6] He is known in the string theory community for his co-discovery with Strominger that the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of a black hole can be accounted for by solitonic states of superstring theory,[7] [8] and for expounding the relation between geometry and field theories that arise through string dualities (culminating in the Gopakumar–Vafa conjecture). This topic has been known as "geometric engineering of quantum field theories".
In 1997, he developed F-theory, a 12-dimensional theory that compactifies to 10-D Type IIB superstring theory.
He is also interested in understanding the underlying meaning of string dualities, as well as trying to apply superstring theory to some unsolved questions of elementary particle physics such as the hierarchy problem and the cosmological constant problem.
He has made contributions to topological string theories and to the understanding of mirror symmetry.
He is a trustee of Network of Iranians for Knowledge and Innovation (NIKI).[9]
In 2017, Vafa, alongside Andrew Strominger and Joseph Polchinski, jointly won the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics for their advancement of string theory[10] and jointly won the 2014 Breakthrough Prize in Physics Frontiers Prize.[11]
He is the recipient of the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP)'s, 2008 Dirac Medal, which was won alongside Juan Maldacena, and Joseph Polchinski for their advancement of string theory.
In 1998 he was a Plenary Speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians.[12]
In 2016, Vafa was awarded the Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics.[13]
Vafa was elected as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005 and as a member of the National Academy of Sciences in 2009.[14] [15]
In 2021, Vafa was awarded the Mustafa Prize.
Vafa has co-authored and published more than 300 research articles in the fields of string theory, mathematics, and physics, with many other researchers including: Robbert Dijkgraaf, Hirosi Ooguri, Mina Aganagic, Sergei Gukov, Rajesh Gopakumar, Lotte Hollands, and many others. This is a select list of these works: