Witten, T. (Thomas A.)
Oral history interview with Thomas Witten, 2020 September 18.
Interview with Thomas Witten, Homer J. Livingston Professor, Emeritus, in the Department of Physics, James Franck Institute. Witten recounts his childhood in Maryland, Utah, and then Colorado, as his father, a medical doctor moved jobs, and he describes his undergraduate experience at Reed College and where majored in physics and where he benefited from excellent attention from the professors. He discusses his graduate work at UC San Diego, where he was advised by Shang Ma working on two-dimensional charged Bose gas research, and he describes his postdoctoral research at Princeton to work with John Hopfield. Witten conveys the exotic nature of Ken Wilsons ideas on renormalization during that time, and he explains the origins of soft matter physics as a distinct field and his work at Saclay before joining the faculty at the University of Michigan. He describes his subsequent research on pushing concepts of renormalization into polymers and related work on the Kondo effect. Witten explains his decision to join the research lab at Exxon, and he conveys Exxons emulation of Bell Labs as a place where he could pursue basic science within an industrial research lab, and where he could continue his work on polymers. He describes the downsizing of the lab and his decision to join the faculty at the University of Chicago, and his discusses his developing interests in buckyballs and capillary flow. Witten describes his affiliation with the James Franck Institute and its rich history, and he explains his current interests in granular materials, thin sheets, and colloidal rotation. At the end of the interview, Witten emphasizes the technological impact of fast video on soft matter physics and his interest in the physics of crumpling objects.
American physicist. Ph.D. physics, University of California, San Diego (1971). Homer J. Livingston Professor, Emeritus, in the Department of Physics at the University of Chicago's James Franck Institute. Received the American Physical Society's Polymer Physics Prize in 2002. Elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Dyson, Freeman J.
Ma, Shanggeng, 1940-1983
Wilson, Kenneth G. (Kenneth Geddes), 1936-2013
Witten, T. (Thomas A.)
Centre d'ťudes nuclǎires de Saclay
Exxon Corporation
Princeton University
Reed College (Portland, Or.)
University of California, San Diego
University of Chicago. James Franck Institute
University of Michigan
Bose-Einstein condensation.
Kondo effect
Polymers.
Soft condensed matter.
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