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Matthew J. Strassler is a theoretical physicist, science communicator, and educator with a position as an Associate of the Physics Department at Harvard University. His research specializes in quantum field theory, string theory and particle physics.
Strassler did his undergraduate studies at Simon's Rock College and Princeton University. He did his Ph.D studies at Stanford University under the supervision of Michael Peskin[1]. During his collegiate career he also performed concerts.[2]
Stassler was a member at the Institute for Advanced Study in 2002.[3] From 2000 until 2002 he taught at the University of Pennsylvania,[4][5] and then moved on to the University of Washington,[6][relevant? ] where he taught[7] until 2007. He left to a professorship at Rutgers University,[8][relevant? ] where he was on the faculty until 2013. From 2013 into 2015, he was a visiting scholar at Harvard. From 2015 on, he has been an associate in Harvard's Physics Department.[9][5][self-published source?]
Strassler's publications in scholarly venues have given him a published h-factor of 44 as of May 2024 according to INSPIRE-HEP[10] and of 51 according to Google Scholar.[11] His most cited string theory article[11] is "Supergravity and a confining gauge theory: duality cascades and χSB-resolution of naked singularities" (2000), co-written with Igor Klebanov for the Journal of High Energy Physics, which developed cascading gauge theory, involvinga long chain of Seiberg duality transformations.[12] His most-cited particle physics article[11] is "Echoes of a hidden valley at hadron colliders" (2006), work on dark sectors co-written with Kathryn Zurek,[13] in Physics Letters B.[14]
Strassler's physics-oriented blog, Of Particular Significance, often includes reality-checks on mainstream media coverage of physics news.[15] He has written for such outlets as NewScientist.[16] His book Waves in an Impossible Sea: How Everyday Life Emerges from the Cosmic Ocean was a March, 2024 release from Basic Books.[17][18][19][20]
Strassler was elected a fellow of the American Physical Society in 2007 "[f]or work extending the AdS/CFT gravity/gauge duality to QCD-like confining theories, and for insights into novel aspects of the physics of strongly coupled supersymmetric theories".[21]