Dept. of Physics UW-Milwaukee Home Physics     
    
Obtain a printable version    
Department
Physics Home
Contact Info
Employment

People
Faculty
Staff
Lecturers
Research Associates
Graduate Students
Previous Students

Undergraduate
General Information
Tutoring
Physics Major
Physics Minor
UG Catalog (Courses)
Physics & Engineering
Undergraduate Seminar
Scholarships
Research
Physics Colloquium

Graduate
Admissions
Campus, Housing and City
Courses
Graduate School Bulletin
Financial Information
Fellowships/Scholarships
New Grad Students
Orientation
Program Overview
Student Guide

Research
Groups and overview

Research Experience for Teachers (RET)
Information

Colloquia and Seminars
Colloquia [Future][All]
Med. Imaging Seminars [Future][All]
blank.gif

 

Distinguished Professor Leonard Parker
leonard@uwm.edu
Telephone: (414) 229-6437
Room: 402

 

Leonard Parker's pioneering work on particle creation in the early universe developed a framework used in more than a thousand subsequent papers on quantum field theory in curved spacetime. A fellow of the American Physical Society, Parker has served on the editorial board of the Journal of Mathematical Physics and is presently on the editorial boards of the International Journal of Modern Physics A and Modern Physics Letters A. His current interests include cosmological models involving phase transitions and other quantum processes, fundamental aspects of quantum fields in curved spacetime, and the relativistic astrophysics of rapidly rotating neutron stars. He also works on techniques for doing symbolic calculation by computer and is co-developer of an important system for doing tensor analysis by computer.

Leonard Parker's work in quantum field theory is concerned with quantum processes in strong gravitational fields. These include the production of particles by gravitational fields in the early universe and by black holes. He showed that the rapid early expansion of the universe can create elementary particles. This is probably the earliest dynamical process which can equalize the expansion rates of the universe along different directions, thus bringing about an isotropic expansion. At about the same time as Hawking and Wald, he obtained the probability distribution of particles created by a black hole. He has calculated the effects of strong gravitational fields on the atomic spectrum of hydrogen, and has worked on the renormalization group in curved spacetime. He is currently collaborating on a book about quantum fields in curved spacetime.

Visit the MathTensor home page

blank.gif

 

blank.gif
UWM | College of Letters and Science | Undergraduate Admissions | Graduate Admissions  

Send your comments concerning this site to prbrady@uwm.edu
Last modified: Tue Sep 18 17:30:42 2007