Roman Jackiw Explained

Roman Jackiw
Native Name Lang:uk
Native Name:Роман Володимир Яцків
Birth Date:1939 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Lubliniec, General Government (present-day Poland)
Fields:Physics
Workplaces:MIT
Alma Mater:Cornell
Swarthmore
Doctoral Advisor:Hans Bethe
Kenneth G. Wilson
Thesis Title:Nonperturbative solutions of the Bethe-Salpeter equation for the vertex function
Thesis Url:https://worldcat.org/en/title/743254426
Thesis Year:1966
Doctoral Students:Andrea diSessa
Andrew Strominger
Joseph Lykken
Awards:Dirac Medal (1998)
Heineman Prize (1995)
Known For:Adler–Bell–Jackiw anomaly
Jackiw–Teitelboim gravity
Theta vacuum
Children:Stefan Jackiw
Nicholas Jackiw

Roman Wladimir Jackiw (; Ukrainian: Роман Володимир Яцків|{{transliteration|uk|ukrainian|Roman Volodymyr Yatskiv; November 8, 1939 – June 14, 2023) was a Polish-born American theoretical physicist and Dirac Medallist.

Biography

Born in Lubliniec, Poland in 1939[1] to a Ukrainian family, the family later moved to Austria and Germany before settling in New York City when Jackiw was about 10.[2]

Jackiw earned his undergraduate degree from Swarthmore College and his PhD from Cornell University in 1966 under Hans Bethe and Kenneth Wilson. He was a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Theoretical Physics from 1969 until his retirement. He retained his affiliation in emeritus status in 2019.[3]

Jackiw co-discovered the chiral anomaly, which is also known as the Adler–Bell–Jackiw anomaly. In 1969, he and John Stewart Bell published their explanation, which was later expanded and clarified by Stephen L. Adler, of the observed decay of a neutral pion into two photons. This decay is forbidden by a symmetry of classical electrodynamics, but Bell and Jackiw showed that this symmetry cannot be preserved at the quantum level. Their introduction of an "anomalous" term from quantum field theory required that the sum of the charges of the elementary fermions had to be zero. This work also gave important support to the colour theory of quarks.

Jackiw is also known for Jackiw–Teitelboim gravity, a theory of gravity with one dimension each of space and time that includes a dilaton field. Sometimes known as the R = T model or as JT gravity, it is used to model some aspects of near-extremal black holes.[4]

Jackiw married fellow physicist So-Young Pi, daughter of Korean writer Pi Chun-deuk. One of Jackiw's sons is Stefan Jackiw, an American violinist. The other is Nicholas Jackiw, a software designer known for inventing The Geometer's Sketchpad. His daughter, Simone Ahlborn, is an educator at Moses Brown School in Providence, Rhode Island.

Jackiw died 14 June 2023, at the age of 83.[5]

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Kubiĭovych. Volodymyr. Struk. Danylo Husar. 1984. University of Toronto Press. 9780802034441.
  2. http://www.aip.org/history/ohilist/34449.html Oral History Transcript — Dr. Roman Jackiw
  3. Web site: MIT Department of Physics Faculty . . 16 July 2019.
  4. 1907.03363 . Stanford . Douglas . Witten . Edward . Edward Witten . JT Gravity and the Ensembles of Random Matrix Theory . 7 July 2019. hep-th .
  5. Web site: In Memoriam: Roman Jackiw, Jerrold Zacharias Professor of Physics Emeritus (1939-2023) . Deepto . Chakrabarty . MIT . June 15, 2023 . June 17, 2023.
  6. Web site: Honorary doctorates - Uppsala University, Sweden.