Pierre Sikivie (born 29 October 1949) is an American theoretical physicist and currently the Distinguished Professor of Physics at University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida. He invented the axion haloscope and the axion helioscope and has played an important role in the development of axion cosmology.
Academic career
Sikivie completed his Licencie en Sciences from University of Liège, Belgium in 1970 and completed his Ph.D. in
Physics under Feza Gürsey from
Yale University in 1975 with thesis
Lepton and Hadron Spectra in Universal Gauge Theories.
He was a research associate at Dept. of Phys., Univ. of Maryland from 1975 to 1977 and at
SLAC from 1977 to 1979. He became Senior Fellow at
CERN from 1979 to 1981 and assistant professor at University of Florida from 1981 to 1984. He became an associate professor of physics at University of Florida in 1984, and promoted to professor in 1988. He received his present title of "Distinguished Professor" in 2012. He is the 2020 recipient of the
Sakurai Prize and the 2025 recipient of the Galileo Galilei Medal.
In 1994 Sikivie was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society. He was a Guggenheim Fellow for the academic year 1997–1998.[ Pierre Sikivie, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation]
Dark matter axion physics
Sikivie played a crucial role in the development of the Axion Dark Matter eXperiment (
ADMX). He collaborated with his colleagues, Neil S. Sullivan and David B. Tanner, at University of Florida and developed the experimental details of ADMX.
[ ] In 1983, Sikivie, along with
John Preskill, M. B. Wise,
Frank Wilczek,
Larry Abbott,
Michael Dine, and
Willy Fischler, discovered that cosmic axions created from mis-alignment mechanism can be a substantial fraction of Dark Matter. Later Sikivie laid the theoretical ground for dark matter axion detections such as the
ADMX.
See also
External links