| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Kazuhiko Nishijima (西島 和彦 Nishijima Kazuhiko) (4 October 1926 – 15 February 2009) was a Japanese physicist who made significant contributions to particle physics. He was professor emeritus at the University of Tokyo and Kyoto University until his death in 2009.[1] He was born in Tsuchiura, Japan. He is most well-known for the product of his collaboration with Murray Gell-Mann, the Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula, and the concept of strangeness, which he called the "eta-charge" or "η-charge", after the eta meson (η).[1][2] He died of leukemia on 15 February 2009 at the age of 82.[1][3]
[edit] LifeNishijima was born in Tsuchiura, Japan on 4 October 1926.[3] He obtained his diploma in physics at the Imperial University of Tokyo in 1948, and his PhD from Osaka University in 1955 for his thesis on the nuclear potential.[3] In 1950, while at Osaka University, Nishijima was hired by Yoichiro Nambu to work on the theory of strong interactions and of strange particles (then called V particles).[3] While studying the decay of these particles, Nishijima developed, with Tadao Nakano, and independently of Murray Gell-Mann, a formula that would relate the quantum numbers of these particles, the Gell-Mann–Nishijima formula (or sometimes the NNG formula, for Nishijima, Nakano, and Gell-Mann).[3] where Q is the electric charge, I3 is the isospin projection, B is the baryon number, and S is the strangeness quantum number of the particle. This formula was pivotal for the later development of the quark model by Gell-Mann[4] and George Zweig[5][6] in 1964 (independently of each other). From 1956 to 1958, Nishijima worked in Göttingen, Germany, upon the invitation of Werner Heisenberg.[3] In 1958, he moved to the United States and joined the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton University.[3] A year and a half later, he became a professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.[3] In 1966, he returned to the University of Tokyo, where he founded a theoretical physics research group and served in some administrative positions.[3] From 1986 until 1989 and again from 1995 until 2005, he was the president of the Nishina Memorial Foundation, a foundation that promotes physics in Japan.[3] Nishijima kept active in research until near the time of his death. His last subjects of research were color confinement and noncommutative quantum field theory.[3] [edit] Books
[edit] Awards[edit] References
[edit] Further reading
| |||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |