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American physicist and historian of science From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David I. Kaiser is an American physicist and historian of science. He is Germeshausen Professor of the History of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and a full professor in MIT's department of physics. He also served as an inaugural associate dean for MIT's cross-disciplinary program in Social and Ethical Responsibilities of Computing.[1]
David Kaiser | |
---|---|
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater | Dartmouth College (A.B. 1993) Harvard University (Ph.D 1997, 2000) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Physics History of science |
Institutions | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Website | http://web.mit.edu/dikaiser/www/ |
Kaiser is the author or editor of several books on the history of science, including Drawing Theories Apart: The Dispersion of Feynman Diagrams in Postwar Physics (2005), How the Hippies Saved Physics: Science, Counterculture, and the Quantum Revival (2011),[2] and Quantum Legacies: Dispatches from an Uncertain World (2020).[3] He received the Apker Award[4] from the American Physical Society in 1993 and was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2010. His historical scholarship has been honored with the Pfizer Award (2007)[5] and the Davis Prize (2013)[6] from the History of Science Society. In March 2012 he was awarded the MacVicar fellowship, a prestigious MIT undergraduate teaching award.[7] In 2012, he also received the Frank E. Perkins Award from MIT for excellence in mentoring graduate students.[8]
Kaiser completed his AB in physics at Dartmouth College in 1993. He completed two PhDs from Harvard University. The first was in physics in 1997 for a thesis entitled "Post-Inflation Reheating in an Expanding Universe," the second in the history of science in 2000 for a thesis on "Making Theory: Producing Physics and Physicists in Postwar America."[1]
Kaiser's physics research mostly focuses on early-universe cosmology, including topics such as cosmic inflation,[9] post-inflation reheating,[10][11][12] and primordial black holes.[13]In particular, he and colleagues have studied a wide range of initial conditions under which inflation will begin, as well as constructing models of inflation that include features motivated by high-energy particle physics, such as multiple interacting fields with nonminimal couplings to spacetime curvature.[14]
This work includes some of the first calculations of predictions from such models for observable features such as the spectral index of primordial perturbations measured in the cosmic microwave background radiation, the first demonstration that resonant particle production during the reheating phase can persist amid an expanding universe, and the first demonstration of attractor behaviors in multifield models.[15] More recent work has identified distinct processes within the late stages of the reheating phase, which ultimately yield the conditions for standard Big Bang evolution: a hot plasma of Standard Model particles in thermal equilibrium.[16]
Some of Kaiser’s research focuses on primordial black holes, especially as a viable candidate for dark matter. Unlike various hypothetical particles, such as weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) or ultralight particles such as axions, primordial black holes would not require any new particles beyond the Standard Model in order to account for the measured dark matter abundance.[17]
Kaiser and his colleagues have studied mechanisms by which a population of primordial black holes could have formed during the very early universe in models that preserve the close fit between predictions and observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation.[13][17] They have also identified a possible subpopulation of primordial black holes that would have formed with significant QCD color charge,[18] constituting a novel state of matter. Additionally, they have proposed a new observable test to help establish whether primordial black holes exist and contribute significantly to dark matter abundance, based on high-precision measurements of visible objects within the Solar System, such as the planet Mars.[19]
Kaiser has also helped to design and conduct novel experimental tests of quantum mechanics. In one such test, Kaiser and colleagues demonstrated how measurements of neutrino oscillations could be used to test whether quantum objects really persist in superposition states—akin to Schrödinger’s cat—between preparation and measurement. By applying the neutrino measurements to the Leggett-Garg inequality, their long-baseline test showed clear evidence of quantum superpositions over a distance of 450 miles.[20]
In a separate project, Kaiser and colleagues first proposed a novel protocol for experimental tests of Bell’s inequality to address the so-called “freedom-of-choice” loophole.[21] Working with Nobel laureate Anton Zeilinger and his group,[22] their “Cosmic Bell” experiments demonstrated quantum entanglement[broken anchor] while using real-time astronomical measurements of cosmologically distant events to determine the types of measurements performed on each member of an entangled pair.[22] These experiments placed the tightest constraints yet on certain types of alternative models to quantum theory, excluding nearly all possible exploitation of the freedom-of-choice loophole from the causal past of the experiments, extending from the Big Bang to today.[23][24][25] The Cosmic Bell experiments were featured in the PBS NOVA documentary film Einstein’s Quantum Riddle (2019).[26]
Kaiser's historical research focuses on intersections among modern natural sciences, geopolitics, and the history of higher education during the Cold War. His major historical publications include:
His MIT course on "Einstein, Oppenheimer, Feynman: Physics in the Twentieth Century" is available via MIT OpenCourseWare. In addition to his scholarly writing, Kaiser's work has appeared in The New York Times,[27][28][29][30] the New Yorker magazine,[31][32][33] and in several PBS Nova television programs.[34] He also serves as Chair of the Editorial Board of the MIT Press and as Editor of the MIT Case Studies Series on Social and Ethical Responsibilities of Computing. As an invited advisor to a U.S. National Academy of Sciences panel during 2023-24, Kaiser helped to draft a consensus statement regarding generative artificial intelligence and scientific integrity,[35] as well as providing historical context for societal reactions to previous once-new technologies.[36]
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