Albrecht, Andreas Johann
Oral history interview with Andreas Albrecht, 2021 February 10.
In this interview, Andreas Albrecht, Distinguished Professor of Physics and Director of the Center for Quantum Mathematics and Physics (QMAP) at the University of California, Davis, discusses his life and career. Albrecht describes the growth of the department since his arrival, his affiliation with QMAP, and the broader effort to integrate more mathematicians into the field of cosmology. He recounts his childhood in Ithaca as the son of two PhD scientists and family sabbatical visits to Santa Cruz and to the Soviet Union. Albrecht describes his budding interests in physics in high school, his undergraduate experience at Cornell and his early exposure to the ideas of Robert Dicke and Alan Guth. He discusses his graduate work at Penn and the circumstances that led him to become Paul Steinhardts mentee in cosmology. Albrecht conveys all of the excitement surrounding inflationary cosmology in the early-mid 1980s and the opportunity that led to his postdoctoral appointment with Steve Weinbergs group at the University of Texas where he became interested in cosmic strings. He describes his subsequent postdoctoral appointment at Los Alamos where he worked with Wojciech Zurek and where his carpools with Geoffrey West proved to be a formative intellectual experience. Albrecht explains his decision to accept a staff position at Fermilab and the contemporary advances in cosmic strings scaling and why primordial nucleosynthesis was uniquely data-oriented relative to other fields in cosmology. He describes his subsequent faculty position at Imperial College in London and he emphasizes the productive and tight-knit cosmology community across the UK. Albrecht conveys the importance of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments and how his ideas of equilibrium cosmology had changed over time and where the term Boltzman Brains originated. He describes how UC Davis was rapidly growing and how the opportunity to build a cosmology group was appealing to him. Albrecht explains the origins of his arrow of time concept and why this resonates with the broader publics interests in the universe. He conveys the existential difficulty, and possible impossibility, of developing a credible theory of the beginning of the universe. Albrecht reflects on the spiritual dimensions of cosmological unknowability and the significance of the anthropic principle, and he discusses his efforts as department chair to enhance diversity in the field. At the end of the interview, Albrecht discusses his current work on decoherence and einselection, and he explains why avoiding prejudices in ones scientific sensibilities is both singularly difficult and key to unlocking future discovery.
American theoretical physicist and cosmologist. Ph.D. cosmology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (1983). Professional experince includes: post-doctoral researcher, University of Texas, Austin (1983-1985); post-doctoral researcher, Los Alamos National Laboratory (1985-1987); associate scientist, Fermilab (1987-1992); professor, reader, lecturer, Imperial College, London (1992-1998); from professor to distinguished professor of physics and director of the center for quantum mathematics and physics (QMAP), University of California, Davis (1998-).
Albrecht, Andreas Johann
Dicke, Robert H. (Robert Henry)
Guth, Alan H.
Steinhardt, Paul J.
Weinberg, Steven, 1933-
West, Geoffrey B.
Zurek, Wojciech Hubert, 1951-
Cornell University
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Imperial College, London
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Pennsylvania State University
University of California, Davis
University of California, Davis. Center for Quantum Mathematics and Physics
University of Texas.
Anthropic principle.
Cosmic background radiation
Cosmology
Diversity in the workplace
String models.
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