Raman Sundrum

Raman Sundrum
Residence United States
Nationality American
Fields Physics
Institutions Johns Hopkins University
Stanford University
Boston University
Harvard University
University of California, Berkeley
University of Maryland
Alma mater University of Sydney
Yale University
Known for Randall–Sundrum model

Raman Sundrum is an American theoretical particle physicist. His most famous contribution to the field is a class of models called the Randall–Sundrum models, first published in 1999 with Lisa Randall.[1] He is a Distinguished University Professor at the University of Maryland and the director of Maryland Center for Fundamental Physics.[2]

Raman Sundrum did his undergraduate studies at University of Sydney in Australia and received his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1990. He was one of two Alumni Centennial Professors in the Department of Physics and Astronomy of the Johns Hopkins University. In 2010, he left the Johns Hopkins and moved to the University of Maryland. His research is in theoretical particle physics and focuses on theoretical mechanisms and observable implications of extra spacetime dimensions, supersymmetry, and strongly coupled dynamics.

According to Scientific American.com,[3] he was considering leaving Physics for Finance, when he called the now famous author and collaborator Lisa Randall to propose working together on membranes, or "branes" as they are known. Branes are domains or swaths of several spatial dimensions within a higher-dimensional space. The fruits of that collaboration were papers known as RS-1[1] and RS-2, two of the most cited in physics for the past ten years.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 Randall, Lisa; Sundrum, Raman (1999). "Large Mass Hierarchy from a Small Extra Dimension". Physical Review Letters. 83 (17): 33703373. arXiv:hep-ph/9905221Freely accessible. Bibcode:1999PhRvL..83.3370R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.83.3370.
  2. "Maryland Center for Fundamental Physics".
  3. 1 2 The Beauty of Branes, Scientific American, October 2005.


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