John C. Baez | |
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John C. Baez (August 2009)
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Born |
John Carlos Baez June 12, 1961 San Francisco, California, United States |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater |
Princeton University (undergraduate) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (PhD) Yale University (postgraduate) |
Awards | Levi L. Conant Prize (2013) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics, mathematical physics |
Institutions | University of California, Riverside |
Thesis | Conformally Invariant Quantum Fields (1986) |
Doctoral advisor | Irving Segal |
John Carlos Baez (/ˈbaɪ.ɛz/; born June 12, 1961) is an American mathematical physicist and a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Riverside (UCR) in Riverside, California. He is known for his work on spin foams in loop quantum gravity. For some time, his research had focused on applications of higher categories to physics and other things.
Baez is also known to science fans as the author of This Week's Finds in Mathematical Physics, an irregular column on the internet featuring mathematical exposition and criticism. He started This Week's Finds in 1993 for the Usenet community, and it now has a following in its new form, the blog "Azimuth". This Week's Finds anticipated the concept of a personal weblog. Additionally, Baez is known on the World Wide Web as the author of the crackpot index.
Baez was born in San Francisco, California. He graduated from Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey, with a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics in 1982. In 1986, he graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with a Doctor of Philosophy under the direction of Irving Segal. After a post-doctoral period at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, he has been teaching — since 1989 — at UC Riverside. From 2010 to 2012, he took a leave of absence to work at the Centre for Quantum Technologies in Singapore and has since worked there in the summers.