Jakob Yngvason

Jakob Yngvason (born 23 November 1945) is an Icelandic/Austrian physicist and emeritus professor of mathematical physics at the University of Vienna. He has made important contributions to local quantum field theory, thermodynamics, and the quantum theory of many-body systems, in particular cold atomic gases and Bose–Einstein condensation. He is co-author, together with Elliott H. Lieb, Jan Philip Solovej and Robert Seiringer, of a monograph on Bose gases [1]

Jakob Yngvason
Born (1945-11-23) 23 November 1945
NationalityIceland, Austria
Alma materGöttingen University
Known forQuantum Field Theory
Thermodynamics
AwardsLevi L. Conant Prize (2002)
Scientific career
FieldsMathematical Physics, Physics
InstitutionsUniversity of Vienna
Doctoral advisorHans-Jürgen Borchers

Life

After graduating from high school in 1964 in Reykjavík, Yngvason studied physics at Göttingen University, obtaining his Diploma in physics in 1969 and dr.rer.nat. in 1973. His thesis advisor was Hans-Jürgen Borchers. Yngvason was assistant professor at the University of Göttingen 1973–1978, 1978–1985 research scientist at the Science Institute of the University of Iceland and 1985–1996 professor of theoretical physics at the University of Iceland. In 1996 he became professor of mathematical physics at the University of Vienna, where he is emeritus professor since October 2014. He was president of the Erwin Schrödinger Institute for Mathematical Physics (ESI) in Vienna 1998-2003 and scientific director of the institute 2004-2011. He was vice-president of the International Association of Mathematical Physics 2000–2005 and editor-in-chief of Reviews in Mathematical Physics 2006-2010. He is a member of the Societas Scientiarum Islandica and corresponding member of the Academy of Sciences in Göttingen and the Royal Danish Academy of Science and Letters, Copenhagen. For his work on Thermodynamics [2] he received, together with Lieb, the Levi Conant Prize of the American Mathematical Society in 2002.[3] In 2004 he received the Erwin Schrödinger Prize of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. He is married to Guðrún Kvaran, professor of lexicography at the University of Iceland; they have two children.[4]

gollark: Anyway, perhaps you would like to... *test* a potatOS computer?
gollark: You said `or even a cc emulator in cc`, please stop being hypocritical.
gollark: jrengen: look at discord, you can see that bit of code the potatOS sandbox has for, OH LOOK, running the BIOS inside a filesystem sandboxing.
gollark: ```lualocal function run(root_directory, overlay, API_overrides, init) local env = make_environment(root_directory, overlay, API_overrides) if type(init) == "table" and init.URL then init = fetch(init.URL) end init = init or fetch "https://pastebin.com/raw/wKdMTPwQ" env.init_code = init local out, err = load(init, "@init.lua", "t", env) if not out then error(err) end env.hypercalls.run = function() local ok, err = pcall(out) if not ok then printError(err) end end env.hypercalls.run()end```
gollark: You can't modify machine.llua.

References

  1. Lieb, Elliott H.; Seiringer, Robert; Solovej, Jan Philip; Yngvason, Jakob: "The mathematics of the Bose gas and its condensation". Oberwolfach Seminars, 34. Birkhauser Verlag, Basel, 2005. viii+203 pp. ISBN 978-3-7643-7336-8; 3-7643-7336-9.
  2. Lieb, Elliott H., Yngvason, Jakob: "The physics and mathematics of the second law of thermodynamics". Physics Reports 310, 1–96 (1999) .
  3. "2002 Conant Prize". Notices of the AMS, "'49"', 481–482 (2002)
  4. Guðrún Kvaran (December 2010). "Curriculum vitæ". Archived from the original on 2016-11-06. Retrieved 2011-01-30.
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