David John Candlin
David John Candlin (1928, Croydon, Surrey[1] - December 4, 2019[2]) was an English physicist. He was known for developing the path integral formulation of the Fermionic field, inventing Grassmann integration for this purpose.[3] He received his PhD from Cambridge University in 1955, and wrote his influential paper on Grassmann integration shortly thereafter. He was later appointed a lecturer at the University of Edinburgh[4] and retired from this post in 1995.[5] He was at one time involved in collaborative work related to CERN.[6][7][8][9]
In 1955 he married Rosemary Shaw, crystallographer and later computer scientist.[10]
References
- Birth record
- David CANDLIN Obituary - Edinburgh, City of Edinburgh | The Scotsman
- D.J. Candlin (1956). "On Sums over Trajectories for Systems With Fermi Statistics". Nuovo Cimento. 4: 231. Bibcode:1956NCim....4..231C. doi:10.1007/BF02745446.
- A Community of Scholars: The Institute for Advanced Study, Faculty and Members 1930-1980
- Institute for Advanced Study
- Aleph collaboration
- Atlas Graphics Design
- Atlas discussion
- Inspire author profile for Candlin, D.J.
- The Times, 6 Sep 1955, p1
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