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Steven Gubser | |
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Born | Steven Scott Gubser May 4, 1972 Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S. |
Died | August 3, 2019 | (aged 47)
Education | Princeton University 1994, 1998 |
Alma mater | Princeton University (B.Sc, Ph.D.) Cambridge University |
Known for | AdS/CFT correspondence AdS/QCD correspondence AdS/CMT correspondence |
Spouse | Laura Landweber[1] |
Children | 3[1] |
Awards |
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Scientific career | |
Institutions | |
Doctoral advisor | Igor Klebanov |
Steven Scott Gubser (May 4, 1972 – August 3, 2019) was a professor of physics at Princeton University.[2] His research focused on theoretical particle physics, especially string theory, and the AdS/CFT correspondence. He was a widely cited scholar in these and other related areas.[3]
Gubser did foundational work in the AdS/CFT correspondence as a graduate student. In particular, his 1998 paper Gauge Theory Correlators from Non-Critical String Theory with his advisor Igor Klebanov and another Princeton physics professor Alexander Markovich Polyakov, made a precise statement of the AdS/CFT duality. It is one of the all-time top cited papers in theoretical high-energy physics, and is commonly known, along with Edward Witten's 1998 work Anti De Sitter Space And Holography, as the GKPW dictionary. After receiving a Ph.D. in 1998 from Princeton, Gubser became a junior fellow at Harvard University before taking a position as an assistant professor at Princeton. In 2001, he moved to the California Institute of Technology but returned to Princeton in 2002.[4] Gubser's later works concern various aspects of the AdS/CFT correspondence, including its applications in quantum chromodynamics and condensed matter physics. In 2016 he and collaborators proposed a p-adic version of AdS/CFT correspondence whose bulk geometry is a tree graph.
As a high school student in 1989, Gubser was the first American to be grand winner (ranked first among all gold medalists) of the International Physics Olympiad.[5][6] He graduated from Cherry Creek High School in Greenwood Village, Colorado.
He graduated as the valedictorian of the class of 1994 from Princeton University. For his senior thesis he was awarded the LeRoy Apker Award of the American Physical Society, the highest distinction for undergraduate research.
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