Background
Jackiw, Roman was born on November 8, 1939 in Lublinec, Poland. Son of Nicholas and Zenobia (Kostyk) Jackiw. came to the United States, 1949.
physicist university professor
Jackiw, Roman was born on November 8, 1939 in Lublinec, Poland. Son of Nicholas and Zenobia (Kostyk) Jackiw. came to the United States, 1949.
He earned his undergraduate degree from Swarthmore College and his PhD from Cornell University in 1966 under Hans Bethe and Kenneth Wilson.
Born in Lubliniec, Poland in 1939 to a Ukrainian family, the family later moved to Austria and Germany before settling in New York City when Jackiw was about 10. He was a professor at the MIT Center for Theoretical Physics from 1969 until his retirement. He still retains his affiliation in emeritus status in 2013.
Jackiw is famous for the discovery of the so-called axial anomaly, also known as Adler–Bell–Jackiw anomaly, also known as the chiral anomaly. In 1969, Roman Jackiw and John Stewart Bell published their explanation, which was later expanded and clarified by Stephen L. Adler, of the (observed) decay of a neutral pion into two photons. This decay is forbidden by a symmetry of classical electrodynamics, but Bell and Jackiw showed that this symmetry cannot be preserved at the quantum level.
Their introduction of an "anomalous" term from quantum field theory required that the sum of the charges of the elementary fermions had to be zero. This work also gave important support to the color-theory of quarks. Jackiw is also known for Jackiw–Teitelboim gravity also called the "R—T model".
National Academy of Sciences. National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. American Physical Society.
Married So-Young Pi, September 4, 1981. Children: Simone Ahlborn, Nicholas, Stefan Pi.