Hans Joos Explained

Hans H. Joos (31 December 1926, Stuttgart[1] – 18 November 2010, Hamburg) was a German theoretical physicist.[2] He is known for the Joos–Weinberg equation,[3] independently published by Steven Weinberg.

Education and career

Joos studied at the University of Tübingen, where he was mentored by Gert Molière (1909–1964). After graduation, Joos worked in São Paulo and at the University of Hamburg, where he received his doctorate (Promotion) in 1961.[1] As a postdoc he worked in at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (for the academic year 1961–1962),[4] at the University of Minnesota, and at CERN.[5] From 1963 until his retirement, he was a member of the scientific research team at Germany's national research centre Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DESY) in Hamburg and was for some years the head of DESY's theory group. In 1965 he was appointed Honorarprofessor of theoretical physics at the University of Hamburg. He served on the editorial board of Communications in Mathematical Physics. He lived in Halstenbek (on the north-western border of Hamburg).[1]

Selected publications

Articles

Books

References

  1. Book: Habel, Walter. Wer ist wer? Das deutsche Who's who. 24. Schmidt-Römhild. Lübeck. 1985. 3-7950-2005-0. 588. Joos, Hans.
  2. Web site: Joos, Hans @ HPK . . 9 July 2018 .
  3. Joos. Hans. 1962. Zur Darstellungstheorie der inhomogenen Lorentzgruppe als Grundlage quantenmechanischer Kinematik. Fortschritte der Physik. German. 10. 3. 65–146. 10.1002/prop.2180100302. 1962ForPh..10...65J .
  4. Web site: Hans H. Joos. Institute for Advanced Study. 9 December 2019 .
  5. Joos . H. . Weimar . E. . 1976 . On the covariant description of spontaneously broken symmetry in general field theory . Il Nuovo Cimento A . en . 32 . 3 . 283–312 . 10.1007/BF02730117 . 0369-3546.