João Magueijo
João Magueijo | |
---|---|
Born |
1967 Évora, Portugal |
Citizenship | Portuguese |
Fields | Physicist |
Institutions | Imperial College |
Alma mater | University of Lisbon, Cambridge University |
Doctoral advisor | Anne-Christine Davis |
Doctoral students | Carlo Contaldi, Rachel Bean, Kate Land |
João Magueijo (born 1967) is a Portuguese cosmologist and professor in Theoretical Physics at Imperial College London. He is a pioneer of the varying speed of light (VSL) theory.
Education and career
João Magueijo studied physics at the University of Lisbon. He undertook graduate work and Ph.D. at Cambridge University. He was awarded a research fellowship at St John's College, Cambridge, the same fellowship previously held by Paul Dirac and Abdus Salam. He has been a faculty member at Princeton and Cambridge, and is currently a professor at Imperial College London where he teaches undergraduates "General Relativity" and postgraduates "Advanced General Relativity".
In 1998, Magueijo teamed with Andreas Albrecht to work on the varying speed of light (VSL) theory of cosmology, which proposes that the speed of light was up to ×1030 km/s in the early universe. This would explain the 3horizon problem (since distant regions of the expanding universe would have had time to interact and homogenize their properties), and is presented as an alternative to the more mainstream theory of cosmic inflation.
Magueijo discusses his personal struggles pursuing VSL in his 2003 book, Faster Than The Speed of Light, The Story of a Scientific Speculation. He was also associated with a misunderstanding over priority concerning VSL with John Moffat. He was also the host of the Science Channel special, João Magueijo's Big Bang, which premiered on May 13, 2008.
In 2009, he published A Brilliant Darkness, an account of the life and science of vanished physicist Ettore Majorana.
Axis of Evil
The term 'Axis of Evil' has become associated with João Magueijo. Professor Speransky of Lomonosov State University in Moscow states:
It is he who first found out that the 'cold' and 'warm' areas of the metagalaxy happened to be lying in the sky in a somewhat organized way. A computer simulation proved that the above distribution of fluctuations could occur only in case of a considerably smaller-sized universe.[1]
See also
Books
- A Brilliant Darkness: The Extraordinary Life and Disappearance of Ettore Majorana, the Troubled Genius of the Nuclear Age, Basic Books, 2009/2010, ISBN 978-0-465-00903-9
- Faster than the Speed of Light: The Story of a Scientific Speculation, Basic Books, 2003, ISBN 978-07382-0525-0
References
- Albrecht and Magueijo; "A time varying speed of light as a solution to cosmological puzzles" http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9811018
- Magueijo and Smolin; "Lorentz invariance with an invariant energy scale" http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0112090v2
- Magueijo, João, "New varying speed of light theories", Reports on the Progress of Physics, 66 (2003) 2025 (abstract: http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0305457 ) -- Good readable review of VSL theories
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to João Magueijo. |
Wikiquote has quotations related to: João Magueijo |
- João Magueijo's Big Bang on the Science Channel
- New theory on light weighs heavily on scientists on The Christian Science Monitor
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