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David J Thouless

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Residence
  
United States

Role
  
Physicist


Name
  
David Thouless

Nationality
  
ScottishAmerican

Doctoral advisor
  
David J. Thouless wwwwolffundorgilfileswinnersdavidthoulessjpg

Born
  
21 September 1934 (age 90) Bearsden, Scotland (
1934-09-21
)

Institutions
  
University of California, BerkeleyBirmingham UniversityUniversity of Washington

Alma mater
  
Trinity Hall, CambridgeCornell University

Known for
  
Kosterlitz–Thouless transitionThouless energyTopological quantum numbers

Books
  
Topological Quantum Numbers in Nonrelativistic Physics

Awards
  
Wolf Prize in Physics, Dirac Medal of the Institute of Physics

Notable awards
  
Maxwell Medal and Prize, Lars Onsager Prize

The nobel prize in physics 2016 david j thouless f duncan m haldane and j michael kosterlitz


David James Thouless (, born 21 September 1934) is a British condensed-matter physicist. He is a winner of the Wolf Prize and laureate of the 2016 Nobel Prize for physics along with F. Duncan M. Haldane and J. Michael Kosterlitz for theoretical discoveries of topological phase transitions and topological phases of matter. In 2016, Thouless was reported to be suffering from dementia.

Contents

David J. Thouless wwwnobelprizeorgnobelprizesphysicslaureates

The 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics - Professor Michael Fuhrer


Education

Thouless was educated at Winchester College and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge as an undergraduate student of Trinity Hall, Cambridge. He obtained his PhD at Cornell University, where Hans Bethe was his doctoral advisor.

Career and research

Thouless was a postdoctoral researcher at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California Berkeley (he also worked in the physics department) from 1958 to 1959. He was the first Director of Studies in Physics at Churchill College, Cambridge in 1961–1965, professor of mathematical physics at the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom in 1965–1978, and professor of Applied Science at Yale University from 1979 to 1980, before becoming a professor of physics at the University of Washington in Seattle in 1980. Thouless has made many theoretical contributions to the understanding of extended systems of atoms and electrons, and of nucleons. His work includes work on superconductivity phenomena, properties of nuclear matter, and excited collective motions within nuclei.

Thouless has made many important contributions to the theory of many-body problems. For atomic nucleii, he cleared up the concept of 'rearrangement energy' and derived an expression for the moment of inertia of deformed nuclei. In statistical mechanics, he has contributed many ideas to the understanding of ordering, including the concept of 'topological ordering'. Other important results relate to localised electron states in disordered lattices.

Academic papers

Selected papers include:

Awards and honours

Thouless was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1979, a Fellow of the American Physical Society, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a member of the US National Academy of Sciences (1995). Among his awards are the Wolf Prize for Physics (1990), the Paul Dirac Medal of the Institute of Physics (1993), the Lars Onsager Prize of the American Physical Society (2000), and the Nobel Prize in Physics (2016).

References

David J. Thouless Wikipedia


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