Steven Weinberg (born May 3, 1933) is an
American theoretical physicist and
Nobel laureate in Physics for his contributions with
Abdus Salam and
Sheldon Glashow to the unification of the weak force and electromagnetic interaction between elementary particles.
He holds the Josey Regental
Chair in
Science at the
University of Texas at Austin, where he is a member of the Physics and
Astronomy Departments. His research on elementary particles and cosmology has been honored with numerous prizes and awards, including in
1979 the
Nobel Prize in Physics and in
1991 the
National Medal of Science. In 2004 he received the
Benjamin Franklin Medal of the
American Philosophical Society, with a citation that said he is "considered by many to be the preeminent theoretical physicist alive in the world today." He has been elected to the
US National Academy of Sciences and
Britain's
Royal Society, as well as to the American Philosophical Society and the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Weinberg was a major participant in what is known as the
Science Wars, standing with
Paul R. Gross,
Norman Levitt,
Alan Sokal,
Lewis Wolpert, and
Richard Dawkins, on the side arguing for the hard realism of science and scientific knowledge and against the constructionism proposed by such social scientists as
Stanley Aronowitz,
Barry Barnes,
David Bloor,
David Edge,
Harry Collins,
Steve Fuller, and
Bruno Latour.
Weinberg's articles on various subjects occasionally appear in
The New York Review of
Books and other periodicals. He has served as consultant at the
U. S. Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency,
President of the
Philosophical Society of
Texas, and member of the
Board of
Editors of
Daedalus magazine, the
Council of
Scholars of the
Library of Congress, the
JASON group of defense consultants, and many other boards and committees.
After completing his PhD, Weinberg worked as a post-doctoral researcher at
Columbia University (
1957–
1959) and
University of California, Berkeley (1959) and then he was promoted to faculty at
Berkeley (1960–1966). He did research in a variety of topics of particle physics, such as the high energy behavior of quantum field theory, symmetry breaking, pion scattering, infrared photons and
quantum gravity.[6] It was also during this time that he developed the approach to quantum field theory that is described in the first chapters of his book
The Quantum Theory of
Fields[7] and started to write his textbook
Gravitation and
Cosmology. Both textbooks, perhaps especially the second, are among the most influential texts in the scientific community in their subjects.
In 1966, Weinberg left Berkeley and accepted a lecturer position at
Harvard. In
1967 he was a visiting professor at
MIT. It was in that year at MIT that Weinberg proposed his model of unification of electromagnetism and of nuclear weak forces (such as those involved in beta-decay and kaon-decay),[8] with the masses of the force-carriers of the weak part of the interaction being explained by spontaneous symmetry breaking. One of its fundamental aspects was the prediction of the existence of the
Higgs boson. Weinberg's model, now known as the electroweak unification theory, had the same symmetry structure as that proposed by
Glashow in
1961: hence both models included the then-unknown weak interaction mechanism between leptons, known as neutral current and mediated by the
Z boson. The
1973 experimental discovery of weak neutral currents[9] (mediated by this Z boson) was one verification of the electroweak unification. The paper by Weinberg in which he presented this theory was one of the most cited theoretical works ever in high energy physics as of 2009.[10]
After his 1967 seminal work on the unification of weak and electromagnetic interactions, Steven Weinberg continued his work in many aspects of particle physics, quantum field theory, gravity, supersymmetry, superstrings and cosmology, as well as a theory called
Technicolor.
In the years after 1967, the full
Standard Model of elementary particle theory was developed through the work of many contributors. In it, the weak and electromagnetic interactions already unified by the work of Weinberg, Abdus Salam and Sheldon Glashow, are made consistent with a theory of the strong interactions between quarks, in one overarching theory. In 1973 Weinberg proposed a modification of the Standard Model which did not contain that model's fundamental Higgs boson.
Weinberg became
Higgins Professor of Physics at
Harvard University in 1973.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Weinberg
- published: 06 Sep 2015
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