Achilles Papapetrou

Achille Papapetrou
Born Achille Papapetrou
(1907-02-02)February 2, 1907
Serres, Salonica Vilayet, Ottoman Empire (present-day Greece)
Died August 12, 1997(1997-08-12) (aged 90)
Paris,
France
Citizenship Greece, France
Fields Theoretical Physics
General relativity
Institutions Athens, Berlin, Paris, Dublin, Manchester, Princeton, Boston
Alma mater National Technical University of Athens
Doctoral advisor Paul Peter Ewald
Doctoral students Hans-Jürgen Treder, Georg Dautcourt, Rodolfo Gambini
Known for Mathisson–Papapetrou–Dixon equations, Majumdar-Papapetrou solutions, Weyl−Lewis−Papapetrou coordinates
Spouse Koula

Achille Papapetrou (Greek: Αχιλλέας Νικολάου Παπαπέτρου; 1907–1997) was a Greek-French theoretical physicist, who contributed to the Theory of General Relativity. He is known for the Mathisson−Papapetrou−Dixon equations,[1] the Majumdar−Papapetrou solutions,[2] and the Weyl−Lewis−Papapetrou coordinates of gravity theory.

He worked on exact solutions of Einstein's field equations and long sought a solution for rotating masses, which, however, were only found by Roy Kerr.[3] Papapetrou was then the first who recognized and jubilantly welcomed Kerr's breakthrough announced at the Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics, Dallas, December 1963.[4][5]

Early life and education

Papapetrou was born near Serres, in the Salonica Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire (present-day Northern Greece, Macedonia province), on February 2, 1907. His father was a schoolteacher. During World War I, his family was deported from Serres, but returned at the end of the war.

From 1925, Papapetrou studied mechanical and electrical engineering at the National Technical University of Athens, graduating in 1930. While a student, he was an assistant in the mathematics department, and he started work as an engineer.[6][7]

Research

His start in physics, in 1934, was through graduate studies on solid state physics under Paul Peter Ewald enabled through a scholarship, at the Technical University of Stuttgart. While there, he started working with Helmut Hönl, who was instrumental in the development of his interest in theory of relativity. In 1935, he earned his PhD there, with a dissertation on Investigations on the dendrite growth of crystals,[8] and subsequently returned to the Technical University in Athens as an assistant in electrical engineering.

In 1940−1946, he was professor of physics at the National Technical University of Athens, where he gave seminars on the theory of relativity, and worked in relative isolation during the German occupation of that country. After the end of the war, and in the preamble to the civil war that followed, he was fired from that post for his sympathies with the left-leaning resistance movement. As a result, in 1946, he moved to the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies at the invitation of Erwin Schrödinger, with whom he worked on unified field theories.

From 1948 on, he worked at the University of Manchester where he was a colleague of Leon Rosenfeld and worked on the equations of motion of GR, as well as the equations of motion of particles with spin in GR.

In 1952–1961 he was a researcher at the Research Institute of Mathematics of the National Academy of Sciences in East Berlin, and from 1957 professor at the Humboldt University of Berlin where, among others, Georg Dautcourt and Hans-Jürgen Treder were his pupils.

During 1960–61, he was visiting a group of relativity theorists, including André Lichnerowicz and Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat. From 1962 he was at the Institute Henri Poincaré (IHP) in Paris. At the same time, he was research director of CNRS. Among others, he worked on elastic waves in gravitational radiation detectors, shells of matter and their gravitational collapse, the Newman−Penrose formalism and its identities, stationary axially symmetric gravitational fields, and gravitational and electromagnetic radiation fields.

In 1975 he became Director of the IHP Laboratory of Theoretical Physics, and in 1977 he retired, remaining scientifically active. He was a visiting scientist at Princeton (1964–65), the University of Vienna (1970–71), and Boston University (1972). He later took French citizenship. From 1971 on, he was one of the organizing committee members of the international conferences on general relativity and gravitation (GRG).

He died in Paris, on August 12, 1997.[9]

Selected works

Papapetrou has published two books,

and over a hundred papers, including:

See also

References

  1. Papapetrou, A. (1951). "Spinning Test-Particles in General Relativity. I". Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 209 (1097): 248–258. Bibcode:1951RSPSA.209..248P. doi:10.1098/rspa.1951.0200.
  2. Papapetrou, A. (1948): "A static solution of the equations of the gravitational field for an arbitrary charge distribution", Proc. Roy. Irish Acad. A 51 191.
  3. Dautcourt, G. (2009). "Race for the Kerr field". General Relativity and Gravitation 41. p. 1437. doi:10.1007/s10714-008-0700-y.
  4. Thorne, K. S. (1994): Black holes and time warps, W. W. Norton & Co, New York, ISBN 0393312763, p 342: "The astronomers and astrophysicists had come to Dallas to discuss quasars; they were not at all interested in Kerr's esoteric mathematical topic. So, as Kerr got up to speak, many slipped out of the lecture hall and into the foyer to argue with each other about their favorite theories of quasars. Others, less polite, remained seated in the hall and argued in whispers. Many of the rest catnapped in a fruitless effort to remedy their sleep deficits from late night science. Only a handful of relativists listened, with rapt attention. This was more than Achilles Papapetrou, one of the world's leading relativists, could stand. As Kerr finished, Papapetrou demanded the floor, stood up, and with deep feeling explained the importance of Kerr's feat. He, Papapetrou, had been trying for thirty years to find such a solution of Einstein's equation, and had failed, as had many other relativists. The astronomers and astrophysicists nodded politely, and then, as the next speaker began to hold forth on a theory of quasars, they refocussed their attention and the meeting picked up pace."
  5. Further see, Roy P. Kerr (2007): "Discovering the Kerr and Kerr-Schild metrics" arXiv:0706.1109
  6. Ewald, P. P. (1977). "For Achille Papapetrou". General Relativity and Gravitation 8 (8): 539–540. Bibcode:1977GReGr...8..539E. doi:10.1007/BF00756303.
  7. Stachel, J. (1977). "Achille Papapetrou". General Relativity and Gravitation 8 (8): 541–543. Bibcode:1977GReGr...8..541S. doi:10.1007/BF00756304.
  8. Papapetrou, A. N. (1935). "Untersuchungen über dendritisches Wachstum von Kristallen", Pries., Zeitschrift für Kristallographie, 92 (1/2), 89-129.
  9. Stachel, J. (1998). "Achilles Papapetrou". Physics Today 51 (12): 74. Bibcode:1998PhT....51l..74S. doi:10.1063/1.882468. Obituary

External links

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