Jan Ambjørn

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Jan Ambjørn is regarded as the primary founder of Causal Dynamical Triangulation Theory (CDT).

Ambjørn began in the early 1990s searching for a physics model that bonded quantum mechanics and relativistic gravity in a way that didn't require supersymmetry. By 1994, he argued a simpler way to represent quantum gravity was to use Lorentzian space-time geometry as a framework. His first major publication on the lattice model that would become CDT theory was released in 1998. It was then that he and Renate Loll made triangulation and the causal approach the cornerstones to the lattice gauge theory.

The theory of Causal Dynamical Triangulations faced harsh scrutiny for some years because most physicists preferred models that required more dimensions and a fixed background.

By 2004, Ambjørn's assertion of the benefits to a non-perturbative quantum gravity model regained attention. By 2007, CDT Theory became a candidate just as strong as superstring theory for explaining explaining gravity in a quantum mechanical way.

As of 2007, Ambjørn continues to research lattice gauge, string, and quantum gravity theories; matrix models and their applications; and statistical theories of random surfaces and paths. He is currently sharing a position as a professor at the Neils Bohr Institute and the Institute for Theoretical Physics, Utrecht.

Ambjørn has worked with or been acknowledged as an influence by quantum physicists such as Renate Loll, Fotini Markopoulou, Jerzy Jurkiewicz, and Lee Smolin.

[edit] Sources

  • Markopoulou, F., Smolin, L. "Gauge Fixing in Causal Dynamical Triangulations." Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. 23 May 2006.
  • 2004 Conference Journal

[edit] External links