Martin Lüscher (born 1950) is a Swiss theoretical physicist, who works primarily on numerical quantum chromodynamics (lattice field theory).
Lüscher studied at the University of Bern and the University of Hamburg, where he earned his doctorate. He worked since the 1979s at DESY in Hamburg and was professor for theoretical physics in Hamburg. Since 1999 he is at CERN.
Lüscher is one of the people who are the driving powers in the development of "quantum chromodynamics on the lattice". Among other results, in 1991 he found with Weisz and Wolff a new recursive procedure, which avoids large lattices and allows studies for many length scales (Non Perturbative Renormalization-Group).[1] In the 1980s he developed with Weisz "improved actions" for lattice field theories (in which a huge number of lattice variations are used to model continuum effects). The improved actions have better convergence properties in the continuum limit.
In 2000 he received the Max Planck medal of the Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft and in 2004 the Greinacher Prize of the University of Bern.