Sheldon Glashow
University Professor; Arthur G.B. Metcalf Professor of Physics, College of Arts and Sciences
A.B., Cornell University; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard University; Hon.D.Sc., Yeshiva University, University of Aix-Marseille, Adelphi University, Bar-Ilan University, Gustavus Adolphus University; Case Western Reserve University; Hon. Prof. Nanjing University; fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science; member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society; foreign member of the Russian and Korean Academies of Science; founding editor of Quantum Magazine. He is the recipient of many awards, including the Oppenheimer Medal, the Richtmyer Lecture Award, the Erice Science for Peace Prize, and the Nobel Prize in Physics. Professor Glashow has taught at Stanford University, the University of California at Berkeley, and until recently, at Harvard University where he was the Higgins Professor of Physics and Mellon Professor of the Sciences.
Professor Glashow has done seminal research in the fields of elementary particle physics and cosmology. His work led to the prediction of neutral currents, charmed particles, and intermediate vector bosons, all of which were subsequently discovered by experiments. He played a key role in unifying the weak and electromagnetic forces and in creating today's successful "standard model of particle physics," as well as its more speculative generalization, "grand-unified theory." He is the author of some 300 research papers and three books: Interactions (with Ben Bova, 1988), The Charm of Physics (1990), and From Alchemy to Quarks (1993).
Office Hours: Please call 617-353-9099 or e-mail slg@bu.edu.
Telephone: 617-353-9099
Email: slg@bu.edu
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