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Witten, E.
Oral history interview with Edward Witten, 2021 May 15.
Interview with Edward Witten, Charles Simonyi Professor in the School of Natural Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study. Witten discusses his current interests in quantum information theory in gravity, and he recounts his childhood in Baltimore and the influence of his father Louis Witten, who is a physicist. He describes his undergraduate education at Brandeis, where he majored in history, a brief stint working for the McGovern campaign, and a false start in graduate school to study economics before landing at Princeton to study first applied mathematics and then theoretical particle physics with David Gross. He describes the significance of deep inelastic scattering in the emergence of QCD and his earliest exposure to the ideas that would develop into string theory. Witten describes his postdoctoral appointment at Harvard to work with Steve Weinberg, Sidney Coleman, Shelly Glashow, and Howard Georgi. He discusses t Hoofts success at solving the U(1) problem and his early work in supersymmetry by the time he joined the faculty at Princeton. Witten narrates the string revolution of 1984 and the early optimism that string theory would be able to describe the real world. He describes his involvement in topological quantum field theories and he explains his decision to move to the Institute from Princeton. Witten discusses his work with Nati Seiberg on N=2 super Yang Mills in four dimensions, the origins of M-theory in the 1994 string revolution, and the impact of Juan Maldacenas work on AdS/CFT. He describes his collaboration with Seiberg on noncommutative geometry, his interest in the Langlands program, and the role of axions in string theory. Witten conveys the sense of optimism when the LHC turned on and the significance of Khovanov homology and Morse theory. He explains the need to revisit perturbative superstring theory and the possibility that the g-2 muon anomaly experiment at Fermilab will lead to new physics. At the end of the interview, Witten reflects on how little has been seen at the LHC after the Higgs discovery, and he expresses hope that string/M-theory and quantum gravity make meaningful contact during his lifetime.
Edward Witten is the Charles Simonyi Professor in the School of Natural Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. Witten completed his graduate studies in physics at Princeton University and conducted postdoctoral research at Harvard. He previously was on faculty at Princeton University before moving to the Institute.
Atiyah, Michael Francis, 1929-
Coleman, Sidney, 1937-2007
Connes, Alain.
Gross, D. (David Jonathan)
Hooft, G. 't
Kapustin, A. (Anton)
Maldacena, Juan Martn̕, 1968-
Schwarz, John H.
Seiberg, Nathan
Sen, Ashoke
Weinberg, Steven, 1933-
Witten, E.
California Institute of Technology
European Organization for Nuclear Research
Harvard University.
Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton, N.J.)
Princeton University
University of Oxford
Inelastic scattering.
Kaluza-Klein theories.
Large Hadron Collider (France and Switzerland)
Quantum chromodynamics
Quantum gravity
Standard model (Nuclear physics)
String models.
Superstring theories.
Supersymmetry
Interviews. aat
Oral histories. aat
Transcripts. aat
Zierler, David, 1979- interviewer.
AIP-ICOS
American Institute of Physics. Niels Bohr Library & Archives. One Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740, USA
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