Past Member

Sin-Itiro Tomonaga

Affiliation

Math/NS

From the Nobel Foundation:

As soon as the War was over, Tomonaga came back to academic research again with a programme in which he was first to summarize and extend the intermediate coupling theory and secondly to apply the covariant field theory to actual physical systems. His aim was to investigate the nature of field reaction in the meson theory as well as in quantum electrodynamics. He was confident, prior to the Lamb-Retherford experiment, by means of a model calculation that divergence difficulty in quantumelectrodynamics could be overcome simply by handling the infinite mass and charge due to field reactions in some way or another. It was only a step further for him to develop the renormalization theory with covariant formalism in his right hand and experimental support in his left.

Dr. Tomonaga was invited to the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, in 1949 where he was engaged in the investigation of a one-dimensional fermion system. Thus he first succeeded in clarifying the nature of collective oscillations of a quantum-mechanical many-body system and opened a new frontier of theoretical physics, modern many-body problem. In 1955, he published an elementary theory of quantum mechanical collective motions.

"Sin-Itiro Tomonaga: Biographical," Nobel Foundation (1965)

Nobel Laureate, Physics Prize, 1965

Dates at IAS

Member
Math/NS

Degrees

The University of Tokyo
Ph.D.
1939

Honors

1965
Nobel Prize in Physics