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Bryce DeWitt

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Nationality
  
American

Doctoral students
  
Alma mater
  
Role
  
Physicist

Name
  
Bryce DeWitt


Bryce DeWitt wwwmaaorgsitesdefaultfilesimagesspotlighti

Institutions
  
Institute for Advanced StudyUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel HillUniversity of Texas at Austin

Died
  
September 23, 2004, Austin, Texas, United States

Spouse
  
Cecile DeWitt-Morette (m. 1951–2004)

Books
  
Bryce DeWitt's Lectures, The Global Approach to Quantu, Supermanifolds

Similar People
  
Cecile DeWitt‑Morette, Raymond Stora, Julian Schwinger, Corinne Manogue, Richard Feynman

Residence
  
United States of America

Doctoral advisor
  
Julian Schwinger

Education
  

Bryce Seligman DeWitt (January 8, 1923 – September 23, 2004) was an American theoretical physicist who studied gravity and field theories.

Contents

Bryce DeWitt Archives of American Mathematics Spotlight The Bryce S

Life

Bryce DeWitt Bryce DeWitt Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

He was born Carl Bryce Seligman but he and his three brothers added "DeWitt" from their mother's side of the family, at the urging of their father in 1950, after Bryce experienced anti-semitism as a "budding young scientist in Europe" (Seligman is a Jewish name; ethnically Bryce is part Jewish). This is similar to Spanish naming customs, where a person bears two surnames, one being from their father and the other from their mother. Twenty years later this change of name is rumored to have so angered Felix Bloch that he blocked DeWitt's appointment to Stanford University and DeWitt instead moved to Austin, Texas. He served in World War II as a naval aviator. He was married to mathematical physicist Cécile DeWitt-Morette. He died September 23, 2004 from pancreatic cancer at the age of 81. He is buried in France, and was survived by his wife and four daughters.

Work

Bryce DeWitt Bryce DeWitt and Cecile DeWittMorette American Institute of Physics

He approached the quantization of general relativity, in particular, developed canonical quantum gravity and manifestly covariant methods that use the heat kernel. B. DeWitt formulated the Wheeler–DeWitt equation for the wavefunction of the Universe with John Archibald Wheeler and advanced the formulation of the Hugh Everett's many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. With his student Larry Smarr he originated the field of numerical relativity.

Bryce DeWitt Bryce DeWitt 19232004 DeWitt on the relationship betwee Flickr

He received his bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees from Harvard University. His Ph.D. (1950) supervisor was Julian S. Schwinger. Afterwards he worked at the Institute for Advanced Study, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Texas at Austin. He was awarded the Dirac Prize in 1987, the American Physical Society's Einstein Prize in 2005, and was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Books

Bryce DeWitt The Principle of Superposition in its modern Quantum Mechanical view

  • Bryce DeWitt, Dynamical theory of groups and fields, Gordon and Breach, New York, 1965
  • Bryce DeWitt, R. Neill Graham, eds., The Many-Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, Princeton Series in Physics, Princeton University Press (1973), ISBN 0-691-08131-X.
  • S. M. Christensen, ed., Quantum theory of gravity. Essays in honor of the 60th birthday of Bryce S. DeWitt, Adam Hilger, Bristol, 1984.
  • Bryce DeWitt, Supermanifolds, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1985.
  • Bryce DeWitt, The Global Approach to Quantum Field Theory, The International Series of Monographs on Physics, Oxford University Press, 2003, ISBN 978-0-19-851093-2.
  • Bryce DeWitt, Sopra un raggio di luce, Di Renzo Editore, Roma, 2005.

  • Bryce DeWitt Bryce DeWitt with other physicists The Briscoe Center for

    References

    Bryce DeWitt Wikipedia