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Geoffrey Chew
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Geoffrey Foucar Chew (; June 5, 1924 – April 12, 2019) U.S. Public Records Index Vol 1 (Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.), 2010. was an American theoretical physicist. He is known for his of strong interactions.Basarab Nicolescu, "The Bootstrap Principle and the Uniqueness of our World", in From Modernity to Cosmodernity - Science, Culture, and Spirituality, SUNY Press, 2018


Life
Chew worked as a professor of physics at the since 1957 and was an emeritus since 1991. Chew held a PhD in theoretical particle physics (1944–1946) from the University of Chicago. Between 1950 and 1956, he was a physics faculty member at the University of Illinois. In addition, Chew was a member of the National Academy of Sciences as well as the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Faculty: Geoffrey F. Chew, Physics at Berkeley, Department of Physics University of California (accessed April 2, 2012) He was also a founding member of the International Center for Transdisciplinary Research (CIRET).

Chew was a student of . His students include , one of the winners of the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics, and John H. Schwarz, one of the pioneers of .


Work
Chew was known as a leader of the to the strong interaction and the associated bootstrap principle, a theory whose popularity peaked in the 1960s when he led an influential theory group at the University of California, Berkeley. S-matrix theorists sought to understand the strong interaction by using the analytic properties of the to calculate the interactions of without assuming that there is a point-particle field theory underneath. The S-matrix approach did not provide a local space-time description. Although it was not immediately appreciated by the practitioners, it was a natural framework in which to produce a .

Chew's central contribution to the program came in 1961: along with collaborator , they noted that the fall into families (straight-line Regge trajectories) where the square of the mass of a meson is linearly proportional to the spin (in their scheme, spin is plotted against mass squared on a so-called Chew–Frautschi plot), with the same constant of proportionality for each of the families. Since in quantum mechanics naturally fall into families of this sort, their conclusion, quickly accepted, was that none of the strongly interacting particles were elementary. The conservative point of view was that the bound states were made up of elementary particles, but Chew's more far-reaching vision was that there would be a new type of theory which describes the interactions of bound-states which have no point-like constituents at all. This approach was sometimes called nuclear democracy, since it avoided singling out certain particles as elementary.


Legacy
Although the S-matrix approach to the strong interactions was largely abandoned by the particle physics community in the 1970s in favor of quantum chromodynamics, a consistent theory for the scattering of bound-states on straight-line trajectories was eventually constructed and is nowadays known as . Within string theory, reinterpreted S-matrix theory as a flat-space statement of the holographic principle.

Professor Chew participated in religion and science discussions. He stated that an "appeal to may be needed to answer the 'origin' question, 'Why should a quantum universe evolving toward a semiclassical limit be consistent?'" pages 33-36 of co-edited with Roy Abraham Varghese. This book is mentioned in a December 28, 1992, Time magazine article: Galileo And Other Faithful Scientists

Chew investigated into models in which the concept of happenings or (pre-)events play a fundamental role, not only particles. He saw similarities among his approach and the notion of occasion of Alfred North Whitehead. Physics and Whitehead Workshop , August 5–6, 1998


Awards
Chew received the Hughes Prize of the American Physics Society for his of strong interactions in 1962. He also won the in 1969 and in 2008.


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