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MIT's Wilczek Wins 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics
October 5, 2004
Cambridge, Mass. — Professor Frank Wilczek, MIT's Herman Feshbach Professor
of Physics, has won the 2004 Nobel Prize in physics for a "colorful"
discovery in the world of quarks, the building blocks of the atomic nucleus.
A special colloquium by Wilczek, open to the public, will be held on Wednesday,
Oct. 6 at 3:45 p.m. in Building 26-100.
The
work, which involves the dominant, or "color," force between quarks,
is key to several major problems in particle physics and beyond. Wilczek, 53,
shares the prize of about $1.3 million with David J. Gross of the University of
California at Santa Barbara, and H. David Politzer of the California Institute
of Technology.
Wilczek was in the shower when the call from Sweden came at 5:30 a.m. Tuesday
morning. "It was this person with a beautiful accent, and it was so early,
so I was immediately hopeful," said Wilczek's wife, Betsy Devine. "Frank
came in, dripped all over the floor, and talked to half the Swedish Academy."
The three won "for the discovery of asymptotic freedom in the theory of
the strong interaction," according to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
Asymptotic freedom is a phenomenon whereby quarks behave as free particles
when they are close together, but become more strongly attracted to each other
as the distance between them increases. This theory forms the key to the interpretation
of almost all experimental studies involving modern particle accelerators.
"Thanks
to their discovery, David Gross, David Politzer and Frank Wilczek have brought
physics one step closer to fulfilling a grand dream, to formulate a unified theory
comprising gravity as well -- a theory for everything," the Academy said
in announcing the prize.
"What this year's laureates discovered was something that, at first sight,
seemed completely contradictory. The interpretation of their mathematical result
was that the closer the quarks are to each other, the weaker is the 'colour charge.'
When the quarks are really close to each other, the force is so weak that they
behave almost as free particles.
"The converse is true when the quarks move apart: the force becomes stronger
when the distance increases. This property may be compared to a rubber band. The
more the band is stretched, the stronger the force.
"This
discovery was expressed in 1973 in an elegant mathematical framework that led
to a completely new theory, Quantum ChromoDynamics, QCD. This theory was an important
contribution to the Standard Model, the theory that describes all physics connected
with the electromagnetic force (which acts between charged particles), the weak
force (which is important for the sun's energy production) and the strong force
(which acts between quarks). With the aid of QCD physicists can at last explain
why quarks only behave as free particles at extremely high energies. In the proton
and the neutron they always occur in triplets," said the Academy.
Wilczek's earliest work, done with Gross at Princeton in the 1970s, concerned
the change of fundamental couplings with energy. This work led to the discovery
of asymptotic freedom, which makes it possible to understand the behavior of matter
under extreme conditions, such as occurred in the earliest moments of the Big
Bang. Also, it permits the construction of unified models of particle interactions,
which have concrete predictive power.
Wilczek has been a leading participant in all these developments. One notable
result of the cosmological work is a compelling explanation of the asymmetry between
matter and antimatter in the present universe.
In the past few years, another concept Wilczek discovered and developed, fractional
quantum statistics, has been found to characterize the behavior of recently discovered
states of matter. It is the focal point of much current activity in condensed
matter physics.
Wilczek's
many awards include the the 2002 Lorentz Medal from the Royal Netherlands Academy
of Arts and Sciences, which called him "one of the most influential theoretical
physicists of his generation." He is a member of the American National Academy
of Sciences, and has received the Dirac Medal (1994) and the Michelson-Morley
Prize (2002).
Wilczek was born in Queens, N.Y. He received his B.S. (1970) from the University
of Chicago and his M.A. (1971) and Ph.D. (1973) from Princeton University. He
later became professor of physics at Princeton and at the University of California
at Santa Barbara.
He joined the MIT faculty in 2000 with appointments in the Department of Physics
and the Center for Theoretical Physics. This year he was named one of five Kavli
Scholars through MIT's Center for Space Research, soon to be renamed the Kavli
Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research. "We love MIT," Devine
said in a telephone interview. "It’s been wonderful for Frank and our
family."
Wilczek regularly speaks and writes on theoretical physics for a wide audience.
He and his wife live in Cambridge, Mass. They have two daughters, Amity and
Mira. Amity, who has a Ph.D. from Harvard, is currently a postdoctoral associate
in biology there. Mira, who earned her S.B. from MIT in 2004, works for IBM in
Boston.
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