Description
Murray Gell-Mann is an American physicist who received the 1969 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles. He is the Robert Andrews Millikan Professor of Theoretical Physics Emeritus at the California Institute of Technology, a Distinguished Fellow and co-founder of the Santa Fe Institute, Professor in the Physics and Astronomy Department of the University of New Mexico, and the Presidential Professor of Physics and Medicine at the University of Southern California.
He introduced, independently of George Zweig, the quark - constituents of all hadrons - having first identified the SU flavor symmetry of hadrons. This symmetry is now understood to underlie the light quarks, extending isospin to include strangeness, a quantum number which he also discovered.
He developed the V?A theory of the weak interaction in collaboration with Richard Feynman. In the 1960s, he introduced current algebra as a method of systematically exploiting symmetries to extract predictions from quark models, in the absence of reliable dynamical theory.
Born
September 15th, 1929 in New York City / Died: May 24th, 2019 - aged 89
Last Changes
2019/05/25
The celebrity has been marked as passed away
2015/05/06
Address Removed: Available to members only
2015/05/06
Address Removed: Available to members only