Paul Townsend
Paul Kingsley Townsend FRS (/ˈtaʊnzənd/; born 3 March 1951) is a British physicist, currently a Professor of Theoretical Physics in Cambridge University's Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics.[1] He is notable for his work on string theory.[2]
Education
He received his PhD from Brandeis University in 1976[3] for his dissertation The 1/N expansion of scalar field theories OCLC 22736707. Since then he has over 140 publications.[4]
Work
In 1987, Eric Bergshoeff, Ergin Sezgin, and Paul Townsend showed that there are no superstrings in eleven dimensions (the largest number of dimensions consistent with a single graviton in supergravity theories),[5] but supermembranes.[6]
Awards and honours
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in May 2000.[7]
References
- "DAMTP>>People>>Professor P.K. Townsend".
- Townsend Home Page at Cambridge
- "SPIRES-HEP Search". Stanford University.
- Publications by Paul K Townsend per WorldCat.org
- This was demonstrated in: Werner Nahm, "Supersymmetries and their representations". Nuclear Physics B 135 no 1 (1978) pp 149-166, doi:10.1016/0550-3213(78)90218-3
- E. Bergshoeff, E. Sezgin and P. K. Townsend, "Supermembranes and Eleven-Dimensional Supergravity," Phys. Lett. B 189: 75 (1987).
- "Lists of Royal Society Fellows 1660-2007". London: The Royal Society. Archived from the original on 24 March 2010. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to Paul Townsend.
- "Ehrenfest Colloquium Paul Townsend, 30 Sept. 2015". YouTube. Delta Institute for Theoretical Physics. 18 May 2016.
- "Joe Polchinski Memorial Lecture: A Brief History of Branes". YouTube. Int'l Centre for Theoretical Physics. 12 April 2019. (lecture by Paul Townsend)
- "Talk 2: Supersymmetry and RCHO revisited (Paul Townsend)". YouTube. Latham Boyle. 17 October 2021. (Workshop: Octonions and the Standard Model, Perimeter Institute, 2021)
- "Talk 12: Jordan algebras: from QM to 5D SUGRA to Stnd. Model? (Paul Townsend)". YouTube. Latham Boyle. 19 October 2021. (Workshop: Octonions and the Standard Model, Perimeter Institute, 2021)
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