The following is an academic genealogy of theoretical physicists and is constructed by following the pedigree of thesis advisors. If an advisor did not exist, or if the field of physics is unrelated, an academic genealogical link can be constructed by using the university from which the theoretical physicist graduated.
An academic genealogy tree lists the physicists' PhD[lower-alpha 1] (or in some cases BA/MA)[lower-alpha 2] date and school, if known. Nobel Prize winners are indicated by †. If physicists are advised by mathematicians, their genealogy can be readily traced using the Mathematics Genealogy Project.
For the meaning of "s.v.", see here.
Contents
1Founding fathers of modern physics
1.1Niels Bohr
1.2Max Born
1.3Albert Einstein
1.4Enrico Fermi
1.5Ralph H. Fowler
1.6Friedrich Hasenöhrl
1.7Hermann von Helmholtz
1.8Lev Landau
1.9Max Planck
1.10Abdus Salam
1.11Arnold Sommerfeld
1.12Léon Van Hove
1.13Eugene Wigner
1.14Hideki Yukawa
2Classical lineages
2.1Continental physics
2.1.1Erhard Weigel
2.1.2Otto Mencke
2.2British physics
2.2.1Isaac Barrow
2.3Viennese physics
2.3.1Jurij Vega
3See also
4Notes
5References
6External links
Founding fathers of modern physics
Niels Bohr
Niels Bohr† (Copenhagen, 1911 under Christian Christiansen)
Hans Kramers (Leiden, 1919)
Tjalling Koopmans† (Leiden, 1936)
Frederik Belinfante (Leiden, 1939)
Jiaxian Deng (Purdue University, 1950; co-advised by Dirk ter Haar)
Dirk ter Haar (Leiden, 1948)
Anthony James Leggett† (Oxford, 1964)
Amir Caldeira (University of Sussex, 1980)
Jan Engelbrecht (Urbana-Champaign, 1993)
Lev Landau (postgraduate disciple of Bohr at the Niels Bohr Institute, see s.v.)
Max Born
Max Born† (Berlin, 1880 under Carl Runge, see s.v.)
Friedrich Hund (Göttingen, 1922)
Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker (Leipzig, 1933)
Karl-Heinz Höcker (Berlin, 1940)
Harry Lehmann (Jena, 1950)
Bert Schroer (Hamburg, 1963)
Bernd A. Berg (Berlin, 1977)
Klaus Pohlmeyer (Hamburg, 1966)
Karl-Henning Rehren (Freiburg, 1984)
Heinz Bilz (Frankfurt, 1958)[1]
Dieter Langbein (Frankfurt, 1958)
Lothar Wolfgang Nordheim (Göttingen, 1923)
Maria Goeppert-Mayer† (Göttingen, 1930)
Robert G. Sachs (Baltimore, 1939)
Pascual Jordan (Göttingen, 1924)
Jürgen Ehlers (Hamburg, 1958)
Wolfgang Kundt (Hamburg, 1958)
Max Delbrück† (Göttingen, 1930)
Carsten Bresch (Berlin, 1950)
Siegfried Flügge (Göttingen, 1933)
Hans Marschall (Berlin, 1946)
Walter Greiner (Freiburg, 1961)
Amand Fäßler (Freiburg, 1963)
Achim Weiguny (Freiburg, 1963)
Gerhard Vollmer (Freiburg, 1971)
J. Robert Oppenheimer (Göttingen, 1927)
Melba Phillips (Berkeley, 1933)
Sidney Dancoff (Berkeley, 1936)
Sidney Drell (Urbana, 1949)
Steven Frautschi (Stanford, 1958)
Roger Dashen (Caltech, 1964)
Stephen D. Ellis (Caltech, 1971)
David Callaway (University of Washington, 1981)
Randall Furlong (Rockefeller, 1987)
Willis Lamb† (Berkeley, 1938)
Marlan Scully (Yale, 1965)
Mikhail Lukin (Harvard, 1998)
Philip Morrison (Berkeley, 1940)
Robert Christy (Berkeley, 1941)
David Joseph Bohm (Berkeley, 1943)[2]
Yakir Aharonov (Bristol, 1960)[2]
David Pines (Princeton, 1951)
Philippe Nozières (Paris, 1957)
Eugene P. Gross (Princeton, 1948)
Victor Frederick Weisskopf (Göttingen, 1931) (Born was formally advisor, but thesis work was done under co-advisor Eugene Wigner—see s.v.—as Born was sick)[3]
J. D. Jackson (MIT, 1949)
Gordon L. Kane (Illinois U., Urbana, 1963)
David R. Richards (University of Michigan, 1971)
Howard Haber (University of Michigan, 1978)
Marco Diaz (UC Santa Cruz, 1992)
Heather Logan (UC Santa Cruz, 1999)
Chien-Peng Yuan (University of Michigan)
Csaba Balazs (Michigan State University, 1999)
Timothy M. P. Tait (Michigan State University, 1999)
J. Lorenzo Diaz-Cruz (University of Michigan, 1989)
Robert Garisto, (University of Michigan, 1992)
James D. Wells (University of Michigan, 1995)
Brandon Murakami (UC Davis, 2002)
Shrihari Gopalakrishna (UC Davis, 2002)
Christopher Kolda (University of Michigan, 1995)
Graham Kribs (University of Michigan, 1998)
Lian-Tao Wang (University of Michigan, 2002)
Eric Kuflik (University of Michigan, 2011)
F. L. Friedman (MIT, 1949)
William Tobocman (MIT, 1953)
Anthony J. Baltz (Case Western Reserve, 1971)
Murray Gell-Mann† (MIT, 1951)[4]
Kenneth G. Wilson† (Caltech, 1961)[4]
Michael Peskin (Cornell, 1978)[5]
Emil Martinec (Cornell, 1984)
Matthew J. Strassler (Stanford, 1993)
Jonathan L. Feng (Stanford, 1995)
Paul Ginsparg (Cornell, 1981)
H. R. Krishnamurthy (Cornell, 1976)
Sidney R. Coleman (Caltech, 1962)[4]
Leonard Parker (Harvard, 1967)
Stephen B. Fels (Harvard, 1968)
Arnold J. Cantor (Harvard, 1970)
David J. Griffiths (Harvard, 1970)[6]
John E. Mansfield (Harvard, 1970)
Anthony Zee (Harvard, 1970)
Lawrence R. Thebaud (Harvard, 1971)
Wu-Yang Tsai (Harvard, 1971; co-adv. Julian Schwinger, see s.v.)
William Daniel Phillips†
David E. Pritchard
Erick J. Weinberg (Harvard, 1973)
Kimyeong Lee (Columbia, 1987)
James P. Butler (Harvard, 1974)
H. David Politzer† (Harvard, 1974)[7]
Eldad Gildener (Harvard, 1975)
Ian K. Affleck (Harvard, 1975)[8]
Edward Witten (PhD, Princeton (1976) under David J. Gross, see s.v.; post-doctoral studies in Harvard (1976–77) under Sidney Coleman and Oxford (1977–78) under Michael Atiyah—see s.v.)
Frank De Luccia (Harvard, 1979)
Lee Smolin (Harvard, 1979; co-adv. Stanley Deser)[7]
Viqar Husain (Yale, 1989)
Seth Major (Penn State, 1997)
Eli Hawkins (Penn State, 1999)
Mohammad Ansari (Waterloo, 2008)
Gerald E. Sobelman (Harvard, 1979)
Stephen Parke (Harvard, 1980)
Fred Posner (Harvard, 1980)
Bernard Grossman (Harvard, 1981)
Gregory W. Moore (Harvard, 1985)
Jacques Distler (Harvard, 1987)[7]
John March-Russell (Harvard, 1990; co-adv. Frank Wilczek, see s.v.)
Stelios M. Smirnakis (Harvard, 1997)
Nathan Salwen (Harvard, 2001)
James Hartle (Caltech, 1964)
Rodney Crewther (Caltech, 1971)
Christopher T. Hill (Caltech, 1977)
Barton Zwiebach (Caltech, 1983)[4]
Kerson Huang (1953, MIT)
Arthur Kerman (1953, MIT)
Herbert S. Green (Edinburgh, 1947)
Ian Ellery McCarthy (Adelaide, 1956)
Cheng Kaijia (Edinburgh, 1948)
Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein† (Zurich, 1905 under Alfred Kleiner; Einstein was an undergraduate disciple of Hermann Minkowski, see s.v.)
Ernst Straus (Columbia, 1950)[lower-alpha 3]
Enrico Fermi
Enrico Fermi† (Laurea, Pisa, 1922 under Luigi Puccianti)[9]
James Rainwater† (postgraduate work in the Manhattan Project under Fermi; PhD under John R. Dunning, Columbia, 1946)
Chen Ning Yang† (Chicago, 1948; co-adv. Edward Teller)[10]
Jack Steinberger† (Chicago, 1948)
Eric L. Schwartz (Columbia, 1973)
Geoffrey Chew (Chicago, 1948)[9][10]
David J. Gross† (Berkeley, 1966)[10]
Frank Wilczek†[11]
John March-Russell (Harvard, 1990; co-advisor Sidney Coleman, see s.v.)
Chetan Nayak (Princeton, 1996)
Finn Larsen (Princeton, 1996)
Maulik K. Parikh (Princeton, 1998)
Edward Witten (PhD, Princeton, 1976; post-doctoral studies in Harvard (1976–77) under Sidney Coleman—see s.v.—and Oxford (1977–8) under Michael Atiyah—see s.v.)
Jonathan Bagger (1983, Princeton)
Cumrun Vafa (1985, Princeton)
Xiao-Gang Wen (1987, Princeton)
Dror Bar-Natan (1991, Princeton)
Shamit Kachru (1994, Princeton)
Eva Silverstein (1996, Princeton)
Sergei Gukov (2001, Princeton
Ulf Danielsson[12][13] (Princeton, 1992)
John H. Schwarz (Berkeley, 1966)
Anthony Ichiro Sanda (Princeton, 1969)
Cosmas Zachos (Caltech, 1979)
Michael R. Douglas (Caltech, 1988)
Gerald B. Cleaver (Caltech, 1993)
John T. Perkins (Baylor, 2005)
Matthew B. Robinson (Baylor, 2009)
Augusto Sagnotti (Caltech, 1983)
Tsung-Dao Lee† (Chicago, 1950)[9][10]
Richard J. Drachman (Columbia, 1958)
Norman H. Christ (Columbia, 1966)
Carl E. Carlson (Columbia, 1968)
King Yuen B. Ng (Columbia, 1969)
Ralph Linsker (Columbia, 1972)
Oleg Tchernyshyov (Columbia, 1998)
Willem Van Rensselaer Malkus (Chicago, 1950)[9]
Sam Treiman (Chicago, 1952; co-advisor John Simpson)[14]
Stephen L. Adler (1964)[14]
Curtis Callan (1964)[14]
Peter Woit (Princeton, 1985)
Igor R. Klebanov (1986)
Steven S. Gubser (1998)
Juan Maldacena (1996, Princeton)
Alberto Güijosa (1999, Princeton)
Paul B. Kantor (Princeton, 1963)
Steven Weinberg† (Princeton, 1957)[14]
Lay Nam Chang (UC Berkeley, 1967)
Claude Bernard (Harvard, 1976)[15]
John Preskill (Harvard, 1980)
Alexios Polychronakos (Caltech, 1987)
Elias Kiritsis (Caltech, 1988)
Bob Holdom (Harvard 1981)
John Terning (Toronto 1990)
Gerald Gilbert (Texas, 1986)
Fernando Quevedo (Texas, 1986)
Scott S. Willenbrock (Texas, 1986)
Zack Sullivan (Urbana-Champaign 1998)
Ubirajara van Kolck (Texas, 1993)
Rafael Lopez-Mobilia (Texas, 1995)
Kazuo Fujikawa (Princeton, 1970)
Ralph H. Fowler
Ralph H. Fowler (MA, Cambridge, 1915 under Archibald Vivian Hill)[16]
Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac† (PhD, Cambridge, 1926)[16]
Richard J. Eden (Cambridge 1951; co-adv. Werner Heisenberg)
Michael B. Green (Cambridge, 1970)
John C. Polkinghorne (Cambridge, 1955; co-adv. Abdus Salam)[16]
Tom Kibble (University of Edinburgh, 1958)[16]
Seifallah Randjbar-Daemi (Imperial College London, 1980)[16]
Rula Tabbash (ISAS, 2001)[16]
Mark B. Hindmarsh (Imperial College London, 1986)
Dimitris P. Skliros (University of Sussex, 2011)
Ian Gibson Halliday (Cambridge, 1964)
Gerald V. Dunne (Imperial, 1988)
Dennis W. Sciama (Cambridge, 1953)
George Ellis (Cambridge, 1964)
Jeff Murugan (Cape Town)
Nitin Rughoonauth (Cape Town, 2014)
Antony Valentini (ISAS, 1992)
Roy Maartens (Cape Town, 1980)
Stephen Hawking (Cambridge, 1966)
Raymond Laflamme (Cambridge, 1988)
Nike Dattani (Waterloo, 2008)
Don Page (Cambridge, 1978)
Malcolm Perry (Cambridge, 1978)
Tibra Ali (Cambridge, 2002)
Martin John Rees (Cambridge, 1967)
Roger Blandford (Cambridge, 1974)
Brandon Carter (Cambridge, 1968)
Patrick Peter (Paris, 1991)
Xavier Martin (Paris, 1995)
Reinhard Prix (Paris, 2000)
Nicolas Chamel (Paris, 2004)
Gary Gibbons (Cambridge, 1973)
James Binney (Oxford, 1975)
Brian Greene (Oxford, 1987; co-adv. Graham G. Ross)
John D. Barrow (Oxford, 1977)
David Deutsch (Oxford, 1978)
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar† (Cambridge, 1933)
Jeremiah P. Ostriker (Chicago, 1964)
John L. Friedman (Chicago, 1973)
Donald Witt (Milwaukee, 1986)
Jocelyn S. Read (Milwaukee, 2008; co-adv. Jolien D.E. Creighton)
Charalampos Markakis (Milwaukee, 2011)
Abhay G. Shah (Milwaukee, 2011)
Benjamin D. Lackey (Milwaukee, 2012)
John Miller (Oxford, 1974)
Thomas Sotiriou (Trieste, 2007; co-adv. Valerio Faraoni)
Steve Detweiler (Chicago, 1975)
James Blackburn (Florida, 1990)
Brian Baker (Florida, 2002)
Eirini Messaritaki (Florida, 2003)
Dong-hoon Kim (Florida, 2005)
Ian Vega (Florida, 2009)
Garrett Birkhoff
Maurice Pryce
John Clive Ward
Noel B. Slater
John Lennard-Jones (Cambridge, 1924)
William Penney, Baron Penney
John Pople (Cambridge, 1951)
A. David Buckingham (Cambridge)
Friedrich Hasenöhrl
Friedrich Hasenöhrl (Vienna, 1897 under Franz S. Exner, see s.v.)
Erwin Schrödinger† (Vienna, 1910)
Hans Thirring (Vienna, 1911)
Walter E. Thirring (Vienna, 1925)
Mario Bunge (UNLP, 1952)
Walter E. Thirring (Vienna, 1949)
Peter G. O. Freund (Vienna, 1960)
Hsiung Chia Tze (Chicago, 1972)
Jorge Crispim Romão (Chicago, 1979)
Rafael I. Nepomechie (Chicago, 1982)
James T. Wheeler (Chicago, 1986)
Karl Herzfeld (Vienna, 1914)
Walter Heitler (Munich, 1926)
John A. Wheeler (Johns Hopkins, 1933)
Richard P. Feynman† (Princeton, 1942)
George Zweig (Caltech, 1963)
Thomas Curtright (Caltech, 1977)
Stephen Wolfram (Caltech, 1979)
Arthur Wightman (Princeton, 1949)
Arthur Jaffe (Princeton, 1966)
Clifford Taubes (Harvard, 1980)
Lawrence Schulman (Princeton, 1967)
Jerrold Marsden (Princeton, 1968)
Barry Simon (Princeton, 1970)
Rafael de la Llave (Princeton, 1983)
Hugh Everett (Princeton, 1956)
Charles Misner (Princeton, 1957)
John R. Klauder (Princeton, 1959)
Kip Thorne (Princeton, 1965)
William H. Press (Caltech, 1973)
Stephon Alexander (Harvard, 1983; co-adv. Arthur Jaffe)
Saul Teukolsky (Caltech, 1973)
Theocharis Apostolatos (Caltech, 1994)
Robert Geroch (Princeton, 1967)
Abhay Ashtekar (Chicago, 1974)
Jacob D. Bekenstein (Princeton, 1972)
Claudio Bunster (Princeton, 1973)
Norbert Straumann (Zurich, 1961)
Ruth Durrer (Zurich, 1988)
Hermann von Helmholtz
Hermann von Helmholtz (PhD, Berlin, 1842 under Johannes Peter Müller)
Heinrich Friedrich Weber (PhD, Jena, 1865; post-doctoral studies at Berlin (1871–74) under Hermann von Helmholtz)
Henry Augustus Rowland (bachelor's at Rensselaer, 1870; graduate studies at Berlin (1875–76) under Hermann von Helmholt;[17][18][19] no PhD[20])
Gerald B. Arnold (UCLA, 1977) (co-adv. Theodore Holstein)
Frederick Sumner Brackett (Johns Hopkins, 1922)
Heinrich Hertz (PhD, Berlin, 1880)
Wilhelm Wien (PhD, Berlin, 1886)
Arthur Gordon Webster (Berlin, 1890)
Albert Potter Wills (Clark, 1897)
Isidor Isaac Rabi† (Columbia, 1927)[21]
Julian Schwinger† (Columbia, 1939)[21][22]
Roy Glauber† (Harvard, 1949)
Walter Kohn† (Harvard, 1948)
Bryce DeWitt (Harvard, 1950)[22]
Donald Marolf (Texas, 1992)
Stanley Deser (Harvard, 1953)[22]
Lee Smolin (Harvard, 1979; co-adv. Sidney Coleman)
Michael Lieber (Harvard, 1959)
Abraham Klein (Harvard, 1950)
Benjamin W. Lee (University of Pennsylvania, 1960)
Burt Ovrut (PhD, Chicago, 1978)
Gordon Baym (Harvard, 1960)
Ben R. Mottelson† (Harvard, 1950)
Torleif Erik Oskar Ericson (Lund U., 1959)
Luís María Garrido Arilla (1955)[22]
Charles M. Sommerfield (Harvard, 1957)[22]
Howard Georgi (Yale, 1971)[23]
Edward Farhi (Harvard, 1978)
John Hagelin (Harvard, 1981)
Lawrence J. Hall (Harvard, 1981)
Stephen Hsu (Berkeley, 1991)
Nima Arkani-Hamed (Berkeley, 1997)
Thomas Gregoire (Berkeley, 2003)
Sally Dawson (Harvard, 1981)
David B. Kaplan (Harvard, 1985)
Lisa Randall (Harvard, 1987)
Csaba Csáki (1997)
Matthew D. Schwartz (Princeton, 2003)
Andrew G. Cohen
Ann Nelson (Harvard, 1984)
David E. Kaplan (U. Washington, 1999)
Lawrence Paul Horwitz (Harvard, 1954)
Stuart Raby (Tel Aviv, 1976)
Tomas Blazek (Ohio State, 1996)
Arash Mafi (Ohio State, 2001)
Radovan Dermisek (Ohio State, 2002)
Sheldon Lee Glashow† (Harvard, 1959)[22]
Lowell S. Brown (Harvard, 1961)[24]
Kalyana T. Mahanthappa (Harvard, 1961)[25]
Norman J. M. Horing (Harvard, 1964)[26]
Tung-Mow Yan (Harvard, 1968)
Wu-Yang Tsai (Harvard, 1971; co-adv. Sidney Coleman, see s.v.)
Norman Foster Ramsey, Jr.† (Columbia, 1940)
Fritz Rohrlich (Harvard, 1948)[27]
Robert E. Pugh (Iowa, 1963)
Nathan Isgur (Toronto, 1974)
Roman Koniuk (Toronto, 1980)
Simon Capstick (Toronto, 1986)
Eric S. Swanson (Toronto, 1991)
Olga Lakhina (Pittsburgh, 2006)
Pok Man Lo (Pittsburgh, 2011)
Martin Lewis Perl† (Columbia, 1955)
Samuel Chao Chung Ting† (Michigan, 1962; also advised by Lawrence W. Jones)
Lev Landau
Lev Landau† (diploma, Leningrad State University, 1927; he was a pupil of Niels Bohr (see s.v.) during his graduate studies at the Niels Bohr Institute in 1930–31;[28] Leningrad Physico-Technical Institute, D.Sc., 1934, without defending a dissertation)
Alexei Alexeyevich Abrikosov† (Institute for Physical Problems, 1951)
Boris Lukyanchuk (Lebedev Physical Institute, 1979)
Semyon Gershtein (Institute for Physical Problems, 1958)
Isaak Markovich Khalatnikov (Institute for Physical Problems, 1948)
Lev Gor'kov (Institute for Physical Problems, 1955)
Alexander F. Andreev (Institute for Physical Problems, 1964)
Maksim Kagan [ru] (Institute for Physical Problems, 1989)
Miranda Cheng (Amsterdam, 2008; also under Kostas Skenderis)
Eugene Wigner
Eugene Wigner† (Berlin, 1925 under Michael Polanyi)
Victor Weisskopf (Göttingen, 1931; co-adv. Max Born, see s.v.)
Frederick Seitz (Princeton, 1934)
John Bardeen† (Princeton, 1936)
John Robert Schrieffer† (Illinois, 1957)
Joseph O. Hirschfelder (Princeton, 1936)
Conyers Herring (Princeton, 1937)
Edwin Thompson Jaynes (Princeton, 1948)
Marcos Moshinsky (Princeton, 1949)
Abner Shimony (Princeton, 1962)
Hideki Yukawa
Hideki Yukawa† (Kyoto, 1938 under Kajuro Tamaki)
Donald R. Yennie
Stanley J. Brodsky (Minnesota, 1964)
Peter Lepage (Stanford, 1978)
Jonathan Sapirstein (Stanford, 1979)
Thomas W. Appelquist (Cornell, 1968)
J. Terrance Goldman (Harvard, 1973)
Michael Dine (Yale, 1978)
Anthony Carmine Longhitano (Yale, 1981)
Dimitra Karabali (Yale, 1986)
Piotr Karasinski (Yale, 1987)
Daniel Joseph Nash (Yale, 1989)
Tatsu Takeuchi (Yale, 1989)
Opher Shapira (Yale, 1990)
George Triantaphyllou (Yale, 1993)
Myckola Schwetz (Yale, 1997)
Zhiyong Duan (Yale, 2001)
Ho-Ung Yee (Yale, 2003)
Yang Bai (Yale, 2007)
Geoffey T. Bodwin (Cornell, 1978)
Masako Bando (Kyoto, 1966)
Classical lineages
The Max Planck, the Albert Einstein, the Lev Landau, and the Eugene Wigner academic genealogies ultimately lead to the Renaissance humanist Niccolò Leoniceno.
The Arnold Sommerfeld genealogy leads to Felix Klein and then to Otto Mencke via Gauss and Gottfried Leibniz. The Leibniz heritage, however, is due to the premature death of Klein's advisor, Julius Plücker, which forced a second supervisor for the final examination, namely Rudolf Lipschitz.
The Enrico Fermi and the Friedrich Hasenöhrl academic genealogies lead to Jurij Vega.
The Max Born academic genealogy leads to Carl Friedrich Gauss and then on to Otto Mencke and ultimately to Friedrich Leibniz, Gottfried Leibniz's father. The Léon Van Hove lineage stems from the Gottfried Leibniz one as well.
Another advisor line in continental Europe descends from Gottfried Leibniz via—among others—Poisson, Lagrange, the Bernoullis, and Euler. The Gottfried Leibniz lineage ultimately proceeds from the Heinrich von Langenstein one (the Heinrich von Langenstein lineage also includes Nicolaus Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, and Johannes Kepler).
The lineage of the two main American branches (the Henry Augustus Rowland branch and the Arthur Gordon Webster branch—see s.v.) proceeds via Hermann von Helmholtz from Gerard van Swieten—and his mentor Herman Boerhaave—and ultimately from Jacques Dubois and Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples. The Ralph H. Fowler lineage also stems from the same line.
Isaac Barrow was influenced by the work of Vincenzo Viviani, an assistant of Galileo Galilei.
Continental physics
Erhard Weigel
Erhard Weigel (MA, Leipzig, 1650 under the physicist Philipp Müller; Dr. phil. hab., Leipzig, 1652[36] under unknown supervisor)
Gottfried Leibniz (Erhard Weigel was Leibniz's academic advisor in mathematics (summer school, Jena, 1663); Leibniz was also advised by Jakob Thomasius (BA in philosophy, Leipzig, 1662 advisor), Bartholomäus Leonhard von Schwendendörffer (Dr. jur., Altdorf, 1666 advisor), and Christiaan Huygens (mathematics and physics advisor); Leibniz was also MA in philosophy, Leipzig, 1664, LL.B., Leipzig, 1665, and Dr. phil. hab., Leipzig, 1666 under unknown supervisor; Leibniz was a colleague of Otto Mencke[37]—see s.v.)
Jacob Bernoulli (distant—via mail; also influenced by Nicolas Malebranche; two doctorates: Theol. Dr., Basel, 1676 under Peter Werenfels and Dr. phil. hab., Basel, 1684 (advisor unknown))
Johann Bernoulli (Dr. med., Basel: published in 1690, submitted in 1694)
Leonhard Euler (PhD, Basel, 1726)
Joseph-Louis Lagrange (distant, via mail; also advised by Giovanni Battista Beccaria)
Siméon Poisson (diploma, École Polytechnique, Palaiseau, 1800; also advised by Pierre-Simon Laplace)
Michel Chasles (diploma, École Polytechnique, Palaiseau, 1814)
Georges Skandalis (PhD, University of Paris VI, Paris, 1986)
Joseph Fourier (diploma, École Normale Supérieure, year unknown)
Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet (honorary doctorate, Bonn, 1827; also advised by Poisson)
Leopold Kronecker (Dr. phil., Berlin, 1845; also advised by Johann Franz Encke, a student of Gauss—see s.v.)
Rudolf Lipschitz (Dr. phil., Berlin, 1853)
C. Felix Klein (Dr. phil., Bonn, 1868; also advised by Julius Plücker—see s.v.)
Otto Mencke
Otto Mencke (PhD, Leipzig, 1666 under Jakob Thomasius (MA, Leipzig, 1643), a disciple of Friedrich Leibniz (MA, Leipzig, 1622), the father of Gottfried Leibniz; Mencke was a colleague of Gottfried Leibniz[37]—see s.v.)
Johann Christoph Wichmannshausen[37] (PhD, Leipzig, 1685)
Christian August Hausen[37] (Dr. phil., Wittenberg, 1713)
Abraham Kästner[37] (PhD, Leipzig, 1739)
Georg Lichtenberg (Dr. phil., Göttingen, 1765)
Heinrich Wilhelm Brandes (Dr. phil., Göttingen, 1800; also advised by Kästner)
Johann Tobias Mayer (Dr. phil., Göttingen, 1773; also advised by Lichtenberg)
Enno Heeren Dirksen [nl] (Dr. phil., Göttingen, 1820; also advised by Bernhard Friedrich Thibaut)
Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi (PhD, Berlin, 1825)
Otto Hesse (Dr. phil., Königsberg, 1840)
Gustav Kirchhoff (Dr. phil., Königsberg, 1847)
Max Noether (Dr. phil., Heidelberg, 1868)
Loránd von Eötvös (Dr. phil., Heidelberg, 1870)
Johann Friedrich Pfaff (Dr. phil., Göttingen, 1786)
Carl Friedrich Gauss (PhD, Helmstedt, 1799)
Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (distant—via mail; honorary doctorate, Göttingen, 1810)
Heinrich Scherk (PhD, Berlin, 1823; also advised by Brandes)
Ernst Kummer (PhD, Halle, 1831)
Christian Ludwig Gerling (Dr. phil., Göttingen, 1812)
Julius Plücker (PhD, Marburg, 1823)
C. Felix Klein (Dr. phil., Bonn, 1868; also advised by Rudolf Lipschitz—see s.v.—the last year)
Ferdinand von Lindemann (PhD, 1873, Erlangen)
Arnold Sommerfeld (Dr. phil., Königsberg, 1891; see s.v.)
David Hilbert (Dr. phil., Königsberg, 1885)
Martin Kutta (Dr. phil., Munich, 1900)
Hermann Minkowski (Dr. phil., Königsberg, 1885; Minkowski was one of Albert Einstein's undergraduate teachers, see s.v.)
Christoph Gudermann (Lehrerexamen, Göttingen, 1823; honorary doctorate, Berlin, 1832)
Karl Weierstrass (honorary doctorate, Königsberg, 1854)
Hermann Schwarz (Dr. phil., Berlin, 1864)
Lipót Fejér (Dr. phil., Eötvös Loránd University, 1902 under unknown supervisor; pregraduate studies at Berlin under Hermann Schwarz)
Marcel Riesz (Dr. phil., Eötvös Loránd University, 1912)
Einar Hille (Dr. phil., Stockholm, 1918)
Irving Segal (PhD, Yale, 1940)
John C. Baez (PhD, MIT, 1986)
Ferdinand Georg Frobenius (Dr. phil., Berlin, 1870)
Carl Runge (Dr. phil., Berlin, 1880; also advised by Kummer)
Max Born† (Dr. phil., Göttingen, 1906; see s.v.)
British physics
Isaac Barrow
Isaac Barrow (MA, Cambridge, 1652 under James Duport; also mentored by Gilles Personne de Roberval and Vincenzo Viviani)
Isaac Newton (MA, Cambridge, 1668)
Roger Cotes (MA, Cambridge, 1706)
Robert Smith (MA, Cambridge, 1715)
Walter Taylor (MA, Cambridge, 1723)
Stephen Whisson (MA, Cambridge, 1742)
Thomas Postlethwaite (MA, Cambridge, 1756)
Thomas Jones (MA, Cambridge, 1782; co-mentor John Cranke (MA, Cambridge, 1774, mentor unknown))
Adam Sedgwick (MA, Cambridge, 1811; co-mentor John Dawson)
William Hopkins (MA, Cambridge, 1830)
William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (BA, Cambridge, 1845)
Peter Guthrie Tait (BA, Cambridge, 1852)
George Gabriel Stokes (MA, Cambridge, 1841)
Arthur Cayley (BA, Cambridge, 1842)
Andrew Russell Forsyth (BA, Cambridge, 1881)
Edmund Taylor Whittaker (BA, Cambridge, 1895)
William Vallance Douglas Hodge (BA, Edinburgh, 1923)
Michael Atiyah (PhD, Cambridge, 1955)
Nigel James Hitchin (DPhil, Oxford, 1972; co-adv. Brian Steer)
Edward Witten (PhD, Princeton (1976) under David J. Gross, see s.v.; post-doctoral studies in Harvard (1976–77) under Sidney Coleman—see s.v.—and Oxford (1977–78) under Michael Atiyah)
Simon Donaldson (DPhil, Oxford, 1983; co-adv. Nigel James Hitchin)
Francis Galton (MA, Cambridge, 1847)
Isaac Todhunter (MA, Cambridge, 1848)
James Clerk Maxwell (MA, Cambridge, 1854)
Horace Lamb (BA, Cambridge, 1872)[38]
George Chrystal (BA, Cambridge, 1875)
Edward John Routh (MA, Cambridge, 1857; co-mentor Isaac Todhunter)
George Darwin (MA, Cambridge, 1871)
John Strutt, Lord Rayleigh† (MA, Cambridge, 1868)
Jagadish Chandra Bose (BA, Calcutta, 1879; BA, Cambridge, 1884; BSc, London, 1884; DSc, London, 1896; undergraduate studies at Cambridge under Lord Rayleigh)
J. J. Thomson† (BA, Cambridge, 1880; MA, Cambridge, 1883; co-mentor John Strutt)
Charles Thomson Rees Wilson† (BA, Cambridge, 1892)
Ernest Rutherford† (MA, New Zealand, 1893; DSc, New Zealand, 1901; graduate studies at Cambridge c. 1895)
Edward Victor Appleton† (MA, Cambridge, 1913; co-mentor J. J. Thomson)
Henry DeWolf Smyth (PhD, Cambridge, 1923)
Rubby Sherr (PhD, Princeton, 1938)
Charles Glashausser (PhD, Princeton, 1966)
Robert Kaita (PhD, Princeton)
Gregory Hammett (PhD, Princeton)
Kenneth Bainbridge (PhD, Princeton, 1929)
Edward Mills Purcell† (PhD, Harvard, 1938)
Nicolaas Bloembergen† (PhD, Leiden, 1948; graduate studies at Harvard)
Peter Pershan (PhD, Harvard, 1960)
Yuen-Ron Shen (PhD, Harvard, 1963)
Eli Yablonovitch (PhD, Harvard, 1972)
George Pake (PhD, Harvard, 1948)
Charles Pence Slichter (PhD, Harvard, 1949)
Owen Willans Richardson† (ScD, University College London, 1904)
Clinton Davisson† (PhD, Princeton, 1911)
Karl Taylor Compton (PhD, Princeton, 1912)
John Quincy Stewart (PhD, Princeton, 1919)
Philip M. Morse (PhD, Princeton, 1929)
Carl Eckart (PhD, Princeton, 1925)
Charles Glover Barkla† (Liverpool alumnus. c. 1899; advanced studies at Cambridge)
Francis William Aston† (Birmingham alumnus. c. 1903; advanced studies at Cambridge)
George Paget Thomson† (Cambridge alumnus, c. 1914)
Ishrat Hussain Usmani (PhD, Imperial College London, 1939)
William Henry Bragg† (MA, Cambridge, 1885)
William Lawrence Bragg† (MA, Cambridge, 1912)
Alfred North Whitehead (MA, Cambridge, 1884)
Arthur Eddington (MA, Cambridge, 1905)
Hermann Bondi (MA, Cambridge, 1940)
Viennese physics
Jurij Vega
Jurij Vega (he graduated from the Lyceum of Ljubljana (Liceju v Ljubljani) in 1775; he studied under Gabriel Gruber)[39]
Ignaz Lindner [sl] (he studied under Jurij Vega)[39]
Andreas von Ettingshausen (he studied under Ignaz Lindner)[40]
Francesco Rossetti (Lehramtsprüfung, Vienna, 1857)
Josef Stefan (Dr. phil. hab., Vienna, 1858 under unknown adv.; post-doctoral studies under Andreas von Ettinghausen)
Ludwig Boltzmann (PhD, Vienna, 1866)
Paul Ehrenfest (PhD, Vienna, 1904)
George Uhlenbeck (PhD, Leiden, 1927)
Hendrik Casimir (PhD, Leiden, 1931)
Viktor von Lang (PhD, Giessen, 1859 under unknown adv.; he was appointed in 1865 to the chair of Andreas von Ettinghausen)[41]
Franz S. Exner (Dr. phil. hab., Vienna, 1872)
Friedrich Hasenöhrl (PhD, Vienna, 1896, see s.v.)
Marian Smoluchowski (PhD, Vienna, 1894)
Stefan Meyer (PhD, Vienna, 1886)
Felix Ehrenhaft (PhD, Vienna, 1903)
Lise Meitner (PhD, Vienna, 1905)
Karl Lark-Horovitz (PhD, Vienna, 1919)
Ernst Mach (PhD, Vienna, 1860)
Ottokar Tumlirz (PhD, Prague, 1879)
Arthur March (PhD, Innsbruck, 1913)
Fritz Sauter (PhD, Innsbruck, 1928)
Friedrich Bopp (PhD, Göttingen, 1937)
Rudolf Haag (PhD, Munich, 1951)
Huzihiro Araki (PhD, Princeton, 1960)
Bert Schroer (PhD, Hamburg, 1963)
Detlev Buchholz (PhD, Hamburg, 1972)
Volker Enß [de] (PhD, Hamburg, 1974)
Klaus Fredenhagen [de] (PhD, Hamburg, 1976)
Klaus Samelson (PhD, Munich, 1951)
Friedrich L. Bauer (PhD, Munich, 1952)
Herbert Kroemer (PhD, Göttingen, 1952)
See also
List of theoretical physicists
Notes
↑In most of Europe, all fields (history, philosophy, social sciences, mathematics and natural philosophy/natural sciences) other than theology, law, and medicine (the so-called professional, vocational, or technical curriculum) were traditionally known as philosophy (see Sooyoung Chang, Academic Genealogy of Mathematicians, World Scientific, 2010, p. 183).
↑Note that there were no PhDs in Germany before the 1650s (when they gradually started substituting the MA as the highest academic degree; arguably one of the earliest German PhD holders is Erhard Weigel, 1652—see his academic lineage tree), in France before 1808 (when they gradually started substituting diplomas as the highest academic degree), in Russia before 1819 (when the Doktor Nauk degree, roughly equivalent to the PhD, gradually started substituting the specialist diploma, roughly equivalent to the MA, as the highest academic degree) and in 1917–1934, in the U.S. before 1861 (when they gradually started substituting MAs as the highest academic degree), in the UK before 1917 (when they gradually started substituting the MA as the highest academic degree), and in Italy before 1927 (when they gradually started substituting the Laurea as the highest academic degree); see Doctor of Philosophy: History and Doktor Nauk: History for further information.
↑Straus began his early work on relativity with Einstein, but then continued his career with work in pure mathematics. Thus, his advisees were specialized in fields unrelated to theoretical physics.
References
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↑ 2.02.1"Mathematics Genealogy Project - David Joseph Bohm". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=106535. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Viktor Frederick Weisskopf". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=76884. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑ 4.04.14.24.3"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Murray Gell-Mann". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=22479. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Kenneth Geddes Wilson". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=105804. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"David J. Griffiths". Reed College. http://academic.reed.edu/physics/faculty/griffiths.html. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑ 7.07.17.2"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Sidney Richard Coleman". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=93780. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑"Harvard PhD Theses in Physics: 1971-1999". https://www.physics.harvard.edu/academics/phds-1970-99.
↑ 9.09.19.29.3"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Enrico Fermi". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=14167. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑ 10.010.110.210.3Andraos, John (2002). "Fermi Tree". CareerChem. http://careerchem.com/NAMED/TREES-PEOPLE/Fermi.pdf. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"Frank Wilczek, Herman Feshbach Professor of Physics; 2004 Nobel Laureate". Massachusetts Institute of Technology. http://web.mit.edu/physics/facultyandstaff/faculty/frank_wilczek.html. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"Ulf Danielsson - The Mathematics Genealogy Project". https://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=80905.
↑Danielsson, Ulf H. (1992-05-18). "A Study of Two Dimensional String Theory (PhD Thesis)". arXiv:hep-th/9205063.
↑ 14.014.114.214.3"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Sam Treiman". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=97741. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"Claude Bernard". Washington University Physics Faculty. Archived from the original on 2008-12-28. https://web.archive.org/web/20081228211654/http://physics.wustl.edu/Fac/facDisplay.php?name=Bernard.txt.
↑ 16.016.116.216.316.416.5"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Ralph Howard Fowler". North Dakota State University. https://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=18251.
↑David Cahan, M. Eugene Rudd, Science at the American Frontier: A Biography of DeWitt Bristol Brace, University of Nebraska Press, 2000, p. 22.
↑Jed Z. Buchwald, The Creation of Scientific Effects: Heinrich Hertz and Electric Waves, University of Chicago Press, 1994, p. 354.
↑David Cahan, Hermann von Helmholtz and the Foundations of Nineteenth-century Science, University of California Press, 1993, p, 397.
↑ 20.020.120.220.320.420.5Andraos, John (2002). "Rowland Tree". CareerChem. http://careerchem.com/NAMED/TREES-PEOPLE/Rowland.pdf. Retrieved 2009-05-05. Note, main CareerChem page is careerchem.com/MainFrame.html
↑ 21.021.1"Charles W. Myles: Academic "Family Tree"". Texas Tech University. 2002-12-02. Archived from the original on 22 April 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090422181220/http://www.phys.ttu.edu/~cmyles/acfam.html. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Charles Michael Sommerfield". North Dakota State. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=105711. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Lowell S. Brown". North Dakota State. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=143901. Retrieved 2014-08-22.
↑"Mahanthappa, Kalyana T.". SLAC - Stanford University. Archived from the original on 2012-08-05. https://archive.is/20120805235529/http://www.slac.stanford.edu/spires/find/hepnames/www?rawcmd=find+name+K.T.+Mahanthappa. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"Norman J.M. Horing - Professor". Stevens Institute of Technology. http://personal.stevens.edu/~nhoring/. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑Jammer, Max (1994). "Fritz Rohrlich and his Work". Found. Phys.24 (2): 209. doi:10.1007/bf02313122. Bibcode: 1994FoPh...24..209J.
↑Landau Lev biography - MacTutor History of Mathematics
↑"As a student, Landau dared to correct Einstein in a lecture". Global Talent News. http://www.en.globaltalentnews.com/current_news/reports/3609/As-a-student-Landau-dared-to-correct-Einstein-in-a-lecture.html. Retrieved 2012-02-02.
↑ 30.0030.0130.0230.0330.0430.0530.0630.0730.0830.09"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Abdus Salam". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/id.phtml?id=46564. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑"Professor Ron Shaw, BA, PhD, ScD(Cantab)". The University of Hull. http://www.hull.ac.uk/php/masrs/reminiscences.html#Anchor-3.-797. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑ 32.032.132.2"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Roman Jackiw". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=76744. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑ 33.033.1"Mathematics Genealogy Project - Rudolf Peierls". North Dakota State University. http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=44061. Retrieved 2009-05-04.
↑Kapusta, J. I. (2008). "Accelerator Disaster Scenarios, the Unabomber, and Scientific Risks". Physics in Perspective10 (2): 163–181. doi:10.1007/s00016-007-0366-y. Bibcode: 2008PhP....10..163K.
↑Erhard Weigel Gesselschaft
↑ 37.037.137.237.337.4Renardy, Michael. "Comments and explanations". Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. http://www.math.vt.edu/people/renardym/comments.html. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
↑Andrew Warwick, Masters of Theory: Cambridge and the Rise of Mathematical Physics, University of Chicago Press, 2003, p. 325.
↑ 39.039.1Stanislav Južnič, "Georg Vega, Slovenian Archimedes (from Pasture to Baron)"
↑Andreas von Ettingshausen, Vorlesungen über die höhere Mathematik: Vorlesungen über die Analysis, Volume 1, Gerold, 1827, p. v.
↑Jagdish Mehra, Helmut Rechenberg, The Historical Development of Quantum Theory, Vol. 5, Part 1, Springer, 2001, p. 72.