- Barry Simon
Infobox Person
image_size = 150px
name = Barry Simon
image_size =
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birth_name =
birth_date = 1946
birth_place =New York City
death_date =
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residence =Los Angeles ,California
nationality = flagicon|US American
known_for =
education =A.B. ,Harvard
Ph.D. ,Princeton University
employer =Caltech
occupation =
title = Professor
religion =Orthodox Judaism
spouse = Martha
children = Rivka Gila
Binyomin Pesach
Zvi Moshe
Aryeh Yehoshua
Chana Alisa
parents = Hyman & Minnie
relatives =
website =
footnotes =Barry Simon (born
16 April ,1946 ) is an eminent Americanmathematical physicist and theIBM Professor ofMathematics andTheoretical Physics atCaltech , known for his prolific contributions inspectral theory ,functional analysis , and nonrelativisticquantum mechanics (particularlySchrödinger operators), including the connections to atomic and molecular physics. He has authored more than 300 publications on mathematics and physics.More particularly, his work has focused on broad areas of mathematical physics and analysis covering:
quantum field theory ,statistical mechanics ,Brownian motion , random matrix theory, general nonrelativistic quantum mechanics (including N-body systems andresonance s), nonrelativistic quantum mechanics in electric andmagnetic field s, the semi-classical limit, the singularcontinuous spectrum , random and ergodic Schrödinger operators,orthogonal polynomials , and non-selfadjoint spectral theory.Early career
A brilliant student, Simon became a
Putnam Fellow in 1965 at 19 years old. He received his A.B. in 1966 fromHarvard College and hisPh.D. inPhysics atPrinceton University in 1970.Following his doctoral studies, Simon took professorship at Princeton for many years, often working with colleague
Elliott H. Lieb on the Thomas-Fermi Theory andHartree -Fock Theory ofatom s in addition tophase transition s and mentoring many of the same students as Lieb. He eventually was persuaded to take a post atCaltech , which he still holds.Anecdotes
His status is legendary in mathematical physics and he is renowned for his ability to write scientific manuscripts "in five percent of the time ordinary mortals need to write such papers." [cite web |publisher=math.caltech.edu|title=Simonfest Barry Stories: Jürg Fröhlich|url=http://math.caltech.edu/SimonFest/stories.html#frohlich]
A colleague of his, in a tale revealing of his brilliance, once stated: Barry has always been remarkable for his vast knowledge of mathematics, so it was many years before I can recall ever telling him a published theorem he didn't already know. One day I saw Barry in Princeton shortly after a meeting and told him about an old inequality for PDEs, which, as I could tell from his intent look, was new to him. I said, "It seems to be useful. Do you want to see the proof?" His response "No, that's OK." Then he went to the board and wrote down a flawless proof on the spot. [cite web |publisher=math.caltech.edu|title=Simonfest Barry Stories: Evans Harrell|url=http://math.caltech.edu/SimonFest/stories.html#harrell]
There is a similar account of how the mathematical physics seminars at Princeton were conducted while Simon was in residence. There was an outside speaker most of the time. Wigner would usually show up and ask his typical "Wignerian" questions. Barry would sit in the audience and write a paper. From time to time he would look up from his notes and ask a question that would unsettle most speakers: someone in the audience seemed to know more about what he was talking about than himself. Sometimes, at the end of the talk, Barry would go to the board and give his version of the proof, which was always slick. [cite web |publisher=math.caltech.edu|title=Simonfest Barry Stories: Yossi Avron|url=http://math.caltech.edu/SimonFest/stories.html#avron]
Family
Barry is married to Martha (née Katzin) who obtained her PhD in Mathematics from Princeton Graduate School. They married in January 1971, shortly after Barry became an Assistant Professor at Princeton. Martha has taught in a variety of schools in the New York/New Jersey area and California and is currently a Lecturer in Mathematics at
CalState Northridge . Barry and Martha have five children and, so far, nine grandchildren.Quotes
*"To first approximation, the human brain is a
harmonic oscillator ." Professor Simon made this remark in private conversation toCharles Fefferman while walking around the Princeton campus. [cite web |publisher=math.caltech.edu|title=Simonfest Barry Stories: Charles Fefferman|url=http://math.caltech.edu/SimonFest/stories.html#fefferman]
*"If you don't know to add fractions, you don't know how to think." This was stated by Professor Simon while lecturing to a freshman mathematics class at theCalifornia Institute of Technology .elected publications
*Resonances in "n"-body quantum systems with dilatation analytic potentials and the foundations of time-dependent perturbation theory, Annals of Math. 97 (1973), 247-274
*(with M. Reed) Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Vol. I: Functional Analysis, Academic Press, 1972; Vol. II: Fourier Analysis, Self-Adjointness, Academic Press, 1975; Vol. III: Scattering Theory, Academic Press, 1978; Vol. IV: Analysis of Operators, Academic Press, 1977
*(with F. Guerra and L. Rosen) The P(φ)2 quantum theory as classical statistical mechanics, Annals of Math. 101 (1975), 111-259
*(with E. Lieb) The Thomas-Fermi theory of atoms, molecules and solids, Advances in Math. 23 (1977), 22-116
*(with J. Fröhlich and T. Spencer) Infrared bounds, phase transitions and continuous symmetry breaking, Commun. Math. Phys. 50 (1976), 79-85
*(with P. Perry and I. Sigal) Spectral analysis of multiparticle Schrödinger operators, Annals of Math. 114 (1981), 519-567
*(with M. Aizenman) Brownian motion and Harnack's inequality for Schrödinger operators, Commun. Pure Appl. Math. 35 (1982), 209-273
*Semiclassical analysis of low lying eigenvalues, II. Tunneling, Annals of Math. 120 (1984), 89-118
*Holonomy, the quantum adiabatic theorem and Berry's phase, Phys. Rev. Lett. 51 (1983), 2167-2170
*(with T. Wolff) Singular continuous spectrum under rank one perturbations and localization for random Hamiltonians, Commun. Pure Appl. Math. 39 (1986), 75-90
*Operators with singular continuous spectrum: I. General operators, Annals of Math. 141 (1995), 131-145References
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*External links
* [http://www.math.caltech.edu/people/simon.html Prof. Simon's Homepage]
* [http://math.caltech.edu/mp2006conf.html SimonFest]
*MathGenealogy|id=11905
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