J. C. Séamus Davis is an Irish physicist whose research explores the world of macroscopic quantum physics. Davis concentrates upon the fundamental physics of exotic states of electronic, magnetic, atomic and space-time quantum matter. A specialty is development of innovative instrumentation to allow direct atomic-scale visualization or perception of the quantum many-body phenomena that are characteristic of these states.
Davis operates three suites of ultra-low vibration laboratories, one in Beecroft Building at University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, another in the Kane Building at University College Cork in Ireland and a third in Clark Hall at Cornell University in the United States. Other key components of the program are at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids[1] in Germany.
Davis was admitted to University College Cork (UCC) in 1978 and studied physics under Frank Fahy, earning a B.Sc. there in 1983.[2] He got a Ph.D. in physics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1989, became a postdoctoral research associate there in 1990 and joined the faculty in 1993, rising through the ranks to become a full professor of physics in 2001. From 1998 to 2003, he was also a faculty physicist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. He then joined Cornell University as a professor of physics in 2003, and was appointed J.G. White Distinguished Professor of Physics in 2008. Also in 2007, he became SUPA Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of St Andrews. He joined Brookhaven National Laboratory in 2007 as a senior physicist, and in 2009 was appointed director of DOE's Center for Emergent Superconductivity, an Energy Frontier Research Center. In 2019 Davis became emeritus professor of physics at Cornell University, NY, US; professor of quantum physics at University College Cork, Ireland; senior fellow of Wadham College, Oxford, UK; professor of physics at the University of Oxford, UK.
Davis' overall interests focus upon macroscopic quantum physics. Active research subjects include studies of:
For these studies, a variety of specialized instrumentation has been developed including scanning tunneling microscopes, quantum interferometers, quantum mechanical oscillators and spin noise spectrometers. The overall strategy is to exploit distinct capabilities and facilities so as to conduct scientifically harmonized studies with complementary scientific instruments at all group locations.
Davis has been the recipient of
In 2014 he received an honorary doctorate (D.Sc.) from National University of Ireland.[7] In 2019 he was awarded a Science Foundation Ireland Research Professorship, and in 2020 a Royal Society Research Professorship.[8] He is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics (UK), the American Physical Society (USA), the Max Planck Gesellschaft (DE), the Royal Irish Academy (IE), of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.,[9] and a Member of the US National Academy of Sciences.[10]