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Greg Moore (physicist)

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Name
  
Greg Moore


Role
  
Physicist

Greg Moore (physicist) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Books
  
Dirichlet Branes and Mirror Symmetry

Similar People
  
Graeme Segal, Anton Kapustin, Tom Bridgeland

Greg moore physical mathematics and the future


Gregory Winthrop Moore (born 1961) is an American theoretical physicist who specializes in mathematical physics and string theory. Moore is a professor in the Physics and Astronomy Department of Rutgers University and a member of the University's High Energy Theory group.

Contents

Greg Moore (physicist) Greg Moore Physical Mathematics and the Future YouTube

Moore's research has focused on: D-branes on Calabi–Yau manifolds and BPS state counting; relations to Borcherds products, automorphic forms, black-hole entropy, and wall-crossing; applications of the theory of automorphic forms to conformal field theory, string compactification, black hole entropy counting, and the AdS/CFT correspondence; potential relation between string theory and number theory; effective low energy supergravity theories in string compactification and the computation of nonperturbative stringy effects in effective supergravities; topological field theories, and applications to invariants of manifolds; string cosmology and string field theory.

Moore won a 2007 Essays on Gravitation Award from the Gravity Research Foundation for his essay, joint with Frederik Denef, How Many Black Holes Fit on the Head of a Pin? In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.

Moore won the 2014 Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics "For eminent contributions to mathematical physics with a wide influence in many fields, ranging from string theory to supersymmetric gauge theory, conformal field theory, condensed matter physics and four-manifold theory." In 2015, he was jointly awarded the 2015 Dirac Medal by ICTP.

Moore was a member of the Advisory Board for Springer's Encyclopedia of Mathematical Physics.

Greg moore the recent role of 2 0 theories in physical mathematics


References

Greg Moore (physicist) Wikipedia