Tom Banks (physicist)

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Thomas Banks (born April 19,[1] 1949 in New York City[2]) is a theoretical physicist and professor at Rutgers University and University of California, Santa Cruz.

Tom Banks
BornApril 19, 1949
Alma materMIT
Known forM(atrix) Theory
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsRutgers
University of California, Santa Cruz
Doctoral advisorCarl M. Bender
Doctoral studentsLubos Motl

Work[]

Banks' work centers around string theory and its applications to high energy particle physics and cosmology. He received his Ph.D. in Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1973. He was several times a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (1976–78, 1983–84, and in the fall of 2010).[3]

Along with Willy Fischler, Stephen Shenker, and Leonard Susskind, he is one of the four originators of M(atrix) theory, or BFSS Matrix Theory, an attempt to formulate M theory in a nonperturbative manner. Banks proposed a conjecture known as Asymptotic Darkness - it posits that the physics above the Planck scale is dominated by black hole production. He has often criticized the widely held assumption in the string theory community that background spacetimes with different asymptotics can represent different vacua states of the same theory of quantum gravity. Rather, Banks argues that different asymptotics correspond to different models of quantum gravity.[4] Many of his arguments for this and other ideas are contained in his paper "A Critique of Pure String Theory: Heterodox Opinions of Diverse Dimensions." published in 2003.[5]

Notes[]

  1. ^ American Men and Women of Science, 21st ed., 2009, p. 318.
  2. ^ The Institute for Advanced Study. Annual Report 1983/84, p. 55.
  3. ^ "Thomas Banks". Institute for Advanced Study. Retrieved 2018-12-25.
  4. ^ Banks, Tom "TASI Lectures on Holographic Space-Time, SUSY and Gravitational Effective Field Theory", 2010, p. 9.
  5. ^ Banks, Tom "A Critique of Pure String Theory: Heterodox Opinions of Diverse Dimensions.", 2003.

External links[]

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