Richard S. Ward

Richard Samuel Ward
Born (1951-09-06) September 6, 1951[1]
Residence England
Fields
Institutions University of Durham
Alma mater
Doctoral advisor Roger Penrose[2]
Doctoral students
Notable awards Whitehead Prize (1989)
Fellow of the Royal Society (2005)

Richard Samuel Ward FRS (born 6 September 1951) is a British mathematical physicist. He is a Professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of Durham.[3]

Work

Ward earned his Ph.D. from the University of Oxford in 1977, under the supervision of Roger Penrose. He is most famous for his extension of Penrose's twistor theory to nonlinear cases, which he with Michael Atiyah used to describe instantons by vector bundles on the three-dimensional complex projective space. He has related interests in the theory of monopoles, topological solitons and skyrmions.

Honors and awards

Ward was awarded the Whitehead Prize in 1989 for his work in mathematical physics.[4] He was elected as a fellow of the Royal Society of London in 2005.[5] His certificate of election reads:

Richard Ward is distinguished for pioneering and elegant research in mathematical physics. He adapted the twistor transform to the self-dual Yang-Mills (SDYM) equation, and with Atiyah constructed general multi-instanton solutions. His discovery of the toroidal BPS two-monopole was a breakthrough in soliton theory. He showed that virtually all known integrable equations arise from SDYM by dimensional and algebraic reductions, allowing a unified solution method. Ward's twistor transform of SDYM, applied to string theory, is leading to striking progress in quantum Yang-Mills theory.[6]

Bibliography

Books

Selected academic works

See also

References

  1. 1 2 WARD, Prof. Richard Samuel. Who's Who 2016 (online Oxford University Press ed.). A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc. (subscription required)
  2. 1 2 Richard S. Ward at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Staff profile, University of Durham, retrieved 2016-02-27.
  4. Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, retrieved 2016-02-27.
  5. Notices of the AMS - Sept 2005 American Mathematical Society
  6. "EC/2005/41: Ward, Richard Samuel". The Royal Society. Retrieved 19 March 2016.

External links

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