S. M. Blinder Explained

Seymour Michael Blinder (born March 11, 1932, in New York City) is a professor emeritus of chemistry and physics at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and a remote working senior scientist with Wolfram Research in Champaign, Illinois.

Personal

He attended Cornell University and received an A.B. in physics and chemistry in 1953. He received an A.M. in physics in 1955 and a Ph.D. in chemical physics in 1958 from Harvard University under Professors W. E. Moffitt and J. H. van Vleck (Nobel Laureate in Physics 1977).

Academic positions

Honors and awards

Blinder has received the following awards and honors:

Interests

Research interests include: Theoretical Chemistry, Mathematical Physics, applications of quantum mechanics to atomic and molecular structure, theory and applications of Coulomb Propagators, structure and self-energy of the electron, supersymmetric quantum field theory, quantum computers.

During his academic career, S M taught a multitude of courses in graduate level Quantum Mechanics, Statistical Mechanics, Thermodynamics, Electromagnetic Theory, Relativity, and Mathematical Physics.

Personal interests include: Playing cello, classical music, and chess (S M is a former Junior Chess Master).

Books and publications

Blinder has authored over 200 journal articles in theoretical chemistry and mathematical physics. He has also published six books: