Gabriel Kotliar

Gabriel Kotliar is a professor of physics at Rutgers University who have numerous of publications with an h-index of 51. He received a B.Sc. (1979) in Physics and Mathematics and a M.Sc. (1980) in Physics from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and a Ph.D. (1983) in Physics from Princeton University. Dr. Kotliar was a postdoctoral associate at the Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of California in Santa Barbara for two years before becoming Assistant Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1985. He joined Rutgers University in 1988 as an Associate Professor and was promoted to full professor in 1992. From 1986 to 1988 he was Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow and in 1987 was a recipient of the Young Investigator Award. In autumn of 1990 he along with Antoine Georges developed quantum impurity model which was based upon dynamical mean field theory. In 1994 he became a Lady Davies fellow and by nine years later accepted Guggenheim Fellowship. In 2006 he was awarded Europhysics Prize and then served as a visiting professor in École Normale Supérieure, École Polytechnique and Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Since 2001 he is fellow of the American Physical Society and is an author of 51 publications as well as a co-author of 200 more.[1]

References

  1. "Gabriel Kotliar". Rutgers University. Retrieved December 22, 2013.