- Stanley Mandelstam
Stanley Mandelstam (b. 1928,
Johannesburg ) is aSouth Africa n-born theoretical physicist. He introduced the relativistically invariantMandelstam variables intoparticle physics in 1958 as a convenient coordinate system for formulating hisdouble dispersion relations . The double dispersion relations were acentral tool in the bootstrap program which sought to formulate a consistent theory of infinitely many particle types of increasing spin.Mandelstam, along with
Tullio Regge , was responsible for theRegge theory of strong interaction phenomenology. He reinterpreted the analytic growth rate of the scattering amplitude as a function of the cosine of the scattering angle as the power law for the falloff of scattering amplitudes at high energy. Along with the double dispersion relation, Regge theory allowed theorists to find sufficient analytic constraints on scattering amplitudes of bound states to formulate a theory in which there are infintely many particle types, none of which are fundamental.After Veneziano constructed the first tree-level scattering amplitude describing infinitely many particle types, what was recognized almost immediately as a string scattering amplitude, Mandelstam continued to make crucial contributions. He interpreted the
Virasoro algebra discovered in consistency conditions as a geometrical symmetry of a world-sheet conformal field theory, formulating string theory in terms of two dimensional quantum field theory. He used the conformal invariance to calculate tree level string amplitudes on many worldsheet domains. Mandelstam was the first to explicitly construct the fermion scattering amplitudes in the Ramond andNeveu-Schwarz sector s of superstring theory, and later gave arguments for the finiteness of string perturbation theory.In quantum field theory, Mandelstam and independently
Sidney Coleman extended work ofTony Skyrme to show that the two dimensional quantum Sine-Gordon model is equivalently described by athirring model whose fermions are the kinks. He also demonstrated thatthe 4d N=4 supersymmetric gauge theory is power counting finite, proving that this theory is scale invariant to all orders of perturbation theory, the first example of a field theory where all the infinities in feynman diagrams cancel.Among his students at Berkeley are
Joseph Polchinski andCharles Thorn ."Education:" Witwatersrand (BSc, 1952);
Trinity College, Cambridge (BA, 1954);Birmingham University (PhD, 1956).Career
* Professor of Mathematical Physics,
University of Birmingham , 1960-63
* Professeur Associé,Université de Paris Sud , 1979-80 and 1984-85
* Professor thenProfessor Emeritus of Physics,University of California, Berkeley , since 1963Honours
* Fellow of the
Royal Society , 1962
* Dirac Medal and Prize,International Centre for Theoretical Physics , 1991
* Fellow,American Academy of Arts and Sciences , 1992
*Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics ,American Physical Society , 1992External links
* [http://physics.berkeley.edu/index.php?option=com_dept_management&act=people&Itemid=312&limitstart=0&task=view&id=366 Web page at Berkeley]
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