Ernst Stueckelberg

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Ernst Stueckelberg bigraphy, stories - Swiss mathematician and physicist

Ernst Stueckelberg : biography

February 1, 1905 – September 4, 1984

This article is about the physicist; for his grandfather, the Swiss artist, see Ernst Stückelberg (painter)

Ernst Carl Gerlach Stueckelberg (February 1, 1905 – September 4, 1984) was a Swiss mathematician and physicist.

Career

In 1927 Stueckelberg got his Ph.D. at the University of Basel under August Hagenbach. He qualified as a university lecturer together with Konrad Bleuler under supervision from Gregor Wentzel at the University of Zürich.

In 1934 he devised a fully covariant . To quote this paper, "The approach proposed by Stueckelberg was far more powerful, but was not adopted by others at the time". Now, despite its benefits, this approach has been all but forgotten. However, besides being explicitly covariant, Stueckelberg’s methods avoid vacuum bubbles. See also .

Independently from Hideki Yukawa, he gave vector boson exchange as the theoretical explanation of the strong nuclear force in 1935.

In 1938 he recognized that massive electrodynamics contains a hidden scalar, and formulated an affine version of what would become known as the Abelian Higgs mechanism.Stueckelberg, Helvetica Physica Acta Vol.11, 1938, p.299, 312

He proposed the law of conservation of baryon number.

The evolution parameter theory he presented in 1941 and 1942 is the basis for recent work in relativistic dynamics.

In 1941 he proposed the interpretation of the positron as a positive energy electron traveling backward in time.Stueckelberg, Helvetica Physica Acta, Vol.14, 1941, pp.51-80

In 1943 he came up with a renormalization program to attack the problems of infinities in quantum electrodynamics (QED), but his paper was rejected by the Physical Review.

In 1952 he proved the principle of semi-detailed balance for kinetics without microscopic reversibility.Stueckelberg, E.C.G. (1952) Theoreme H et unitarite de S. Helv. Phys. Acta 25, 577-580Gorban, A.N., Shahzad, M. (2011) Entropy 13, no. 5, 966-1019.

In 1953 he and the mathematician Andre Petermann discovered the renormalization group.Stueckelberg, Petermann „La normalization des constantes dans la theorie des quanta“ Helvetica Physica Acta, Vol.26, 1953, p.499, , Vorarbeiten dazu Stueckelberg, T. A. Green Helvetica Physica Acta Vol.24, 1951, p.153

In 1976 he was awarded the Max Planck medal.

His PhD students included Marcel Guenin.