Davison Soper

Davison "Dave" Eugene Soper (21 March 1943, Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is an American theoretical physicist specializing in high energy physics.[1]

Education and career

Soper received his bachelor's degree in 1965 from Amherst College and his PhD in 1971 under James Bjorken from Stanford University, where he worked with John Kogut.[2] Soper was from 1971 to 1973 an instructor and from 1973 to 1977 an assistant professor at Princeton University. He was appointed in 1977–80 an assistant professor, in 1980–83 an associate professor, and from 1983 to the present a professor at the University of Oregon, where from 2004 to 2007 he was chair of the physics department.[3]

His doctoral dissertation on Null Plane Field Theory dealt with the theory of high energy scattering processes in the parton model. With George Sterman and John C. Collins, he proved a factorization theorem in perturbative quantum chromodynamics (QCD).[4][5]

Soper is a member of the "Coordinated Theoretical-Experimental Project on QCD“ (CTEQ), whose co-spokesperson he was from 2001 to 2004. He was on the editorial board of Physical Review Letters and Physical Review D.

In 2009 Soper received with R. Keith Ellis and John C. Collins the Sakurai Prize of the American Physical Society.[6]

Selected works

  • Classical Field Theory. Dover Publ., Mineola, NY 2008, ISBN 978-0-486-46260-8 (originally published by Wiley, New York 1976).
gollark: No. Via confusing relativity things, light still goes at the same speed relative to you on the ship. You could happily walk around even closer to light speed, and to outside observers you'd just seem to get closer to light speed but never actually reach it. Something like that.
gollark: Anyway, this doesn't seem to... explain anything usefully? It seems like a retroactive justification for *why* stuff is the way it is, but in a way which doesn't seem amenable to making useful predictions, and is also extremely vague.
gollark: Also, screenshots exist. Please use them.
gollark: Never mind, I found the "cosmicwatch" thing online.
gollark: How does it detect muons?

References

  1. Davison E. Soper's page at U. of Oregon
  2. Kogut, J.B.; Soper, D.E. (15 May 1970). "Quantum electrodynamics in the infinite-momentum frame". Physical Review D. 1 (10): 2901–2914. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.1.2901.
  3. Vita, Davison E. Soper
  4. Collins, John C.; Soper, Davison E.; Sterman, George (1985). "Factorization for short distance hadron-hadron scattering". Nuclear Physics B. 281: 104–142. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(85)90565-6.
  5. John C. Collins, Davison E. Soper and George Sterman (1989). "Factorization of Hard Processes in QCD". In Mueller, A. H (ed.). Perturbative Quantum Chromodynamics. World Scientific. pp. 1–92.
  6. 2009 Sakurai Prize for Davison E. Soper
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