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Leo Kadanoff

Leo Kadanoff
Leo Kadanoff.jpg
Leo P. Kadanoff
Born (1937-01-14)January 14, 1937
New York City, New York
Died October 26, 2015(2015-10-26) (aged 78)
Chicago, Illinois
Nationality American
Fields Theoretical physics
Institutions University of Chicago
Alma mater Harvard University
Doctoral advisor Paul Martin
Doctoral students Jorge Jose
Abdullah Sadiq
Bruce Shaw
David Bensimon
Chao Tang
Marcelo Magnasco
Michael Brenner
William A. Dembski
Z. Jane Wang
Scott Shenker
Known for Renormalization group theory of phase transitions
Application of operator algebras in statistical mechanics
Notable awards Wolf Prize in Physics (1980)
Elliott Cresson Medal(1986)
Lars Onsager Prize (1998)
Lorentz Medal (2006)
Isaac Newton Medal (2011)

Leo Philip Kadanoff (January 14, 1937 – October 26, 2015) was an American physicist. He was a professor of physics (emeritus as of 2004) at the University of Chicago and a former President of the American Physical Society (APS). He contributed to the fields of statistical physics, chaos theory, and theoretical condensed matter physics.

Kadanoff was raised in New York City. He received his undergraduate degree and doctorate in physics from Harvard University. After a post-doctorate at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, he joined the physics faculty at the University of Illinois in 1965.

Kadanoff's early research focused upon superconductivity. In the late 1960s, he studied the organization of matter in phase transitions. Kadanoff demonstrated that sudden changes in material properties (such as the magnetization of a magnet or the boiling of a fluid) could be understood in terms of scaling and universality. With his collaborators, he showed how all the experimental data then available for the changes, called second-order phase transitions, could be understood in terms of these two ideas. These same ideas have now been extended to apply to a broad range of scientific and engineering problems, and have found numerous and important applications in urban planning, computer science, hydrodynamics, biology, applied mathematics and geophysics. In recognition of these achievements, he won the Buckley Prize of the American Physical Society (1977), the Wolf Prize in Physics (1980), the 1989 Boltzmann Medal of the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics, and the 2006 Lorentz Medal.


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