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First Workshop on Grand Unification

First Workshop on Grand Unification( )
Editor: Frampton, P.
Glashow, Sheldon L.
Yildiz, A.
Series title:Lie Groups Ser.
ISBN:978-0-915692-31-6
Publication Date:Jan 1980
Publisher:Birkhauser Verlag
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $99.00
Book Description:

This workshop held at the New England Center provided a timely opportunity for over 100 participants to gather in a unique environment and discuss the present status of the unification of strong and electroweak forces. One reason for the timeliness was perhaps that experiments of the seventies had already lent confirmation to the separate theories of strong and of electroweak forces, so that for the eighties it now seems especially compelling to attempt the grand unification of these...
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Book Details
Pages:372
Detailed Subjects: Science / Physics / Nuclear
Book Weight:1.696 Pounds
Author Biography
(Editor)
Sheldon Lee Glashow grew up in New York City and graduated from Bronx High School of Science, where he and Steven Weinberg were classmates. Glashow received his Ph.D. in 1958 from Harvard University. While a student at Harvard, Glashow studied with Julian Schwinger, a pioneer of quantum electrodynamics who had become interested in the weak interaction and its possible connection with the electromagnetic interaction.

In 1961 Glashow took the first step in unifying these interactions. It was finally accomplished in 1967 by Steven Weinberg and Abdus Salam, and in 1979 all three received a Nobel Prize in physics for developing a theory that mathematically and theoretically unifies the weak force and electromagnetic force of the atomic nucleus.

In 1970 Glashow and two collaborators proposed the existence of the charm quark; several years later, physicists discovered particles that contain charm quarks and antiquarks.

The grand unified theory that links the strong and electroweak interactions, which Glashow and Howard Georgi devised in 1974, accounts for many otherwise unexplained observations. Since 1979 Glashow has also been on the Harvard faculty, where he occupied the Eugene Higgins Chair of Physics.

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