David Thouless
Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". David James Thouless (Template:IPAc-en; 21 September 1934 – 6 April 2019[1][2][3]) was a British condensed-matter physicist.[4] He was awarded the 1990 Wolf Prize and a laureate of the 2016 Nobel Prize for physics along with F. Duncan M. Haldane and J. Michael Kosterlitz for theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter.[5]
Education
Born on 21 September 1934 in Bearsden, Scotland [6] to English parents, Priscilla (Gorton) Thouless, an English teacher, and Robert Thouless a psychologist and broadcaster.[7] David Thouless was educated at St Faith's School then Winchester College and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge as an undergraduate student of Trinity Hall, Cambridge.[8] He obtained his PhD at Cornell University,[1][9] where Hans Bethe was his doctoral advisor.[10][11]
Career and research
Thouless was a postdoctoral researcher at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, and also worked in the physics department from 1958 to 1959, giving a course on atomic physics.[3][12][13] He was the first director of studies in physics at Churchill College, Cambridge, in 1961–1965, professor of mathematical physics at the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom in 1965–1978,[14] and professor of applied science at Yale University from 1979 to 1980,[13] before becoming a professor of physics at the University of Washington[15] in Seattle in 1980.[14] Thouless made many theoretical contributions to the understanding of extended systems of atoms and electrons, and of nucleons.[16][17][3] He also worked on superconductivity phenomena, properties of nuclear matter, and excited collective motions within nuclei.[16][17][3]
Thouless made many important contributions to the theory of many-body problems.[3] For atomic nuclei, he cleared up the concept of 'rearrangement energy' and derived an expression for the moment of inertia of deformed nuclei.[3] In statistical mechanics, he contributed many ideas to the understanding of ordering, including the concept of 'topological ordering'.[3] Other important results relate to localised electron states in disordered lattices.[18][3]
Academic papers
Selected papers[19] include: Template:Refbegin
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Books
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Awards and honours
Thouless was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1979,[18] a Fellow of the American Physical Society (1986), a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a member of the US National Academy of Sciences (1995).[20] Among his awards are the Wolf Prize for Physics (1990),[21] the Paul Dirac Medal of the Institute of Physics (1993), the Lars Onsager Prize[22] of the American Physical Society (2000), and the Nobel Prize in Physics (2016).[17][3]
Personal life
Thouless married Margaret Elizabeth Scrase in 1958 and together they had three children.[8] In 2016, Thouless was reported to be suffering from dementia.[23] He died on 6 April 2019 in Cambridge, aged 84.[2]
See also
References
External links
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- ↑ David Thouless, 84, Dies; Nobel Laureate Cast Light on Matter New York Times, 2019-04-22.
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