Cohl furey biography of mahatma
Cohl Furey
Canadian mathematician and physicist
Cohl Furey, also known as Nichol Furey,[1] is a Canadianmathematical physicist.[2][3]
Career
Furey has a bachelor's degree in mathematics and physics from Simon Fraser University (), Master's degree from the University of Cambridge () and a Ph.D in theoretical physics from the University of Waterloo ().[4] She was a research fellow at the University of Cambridge's Trinity Hall from to [5] and spent a few months at the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cape Town.
Biography of mahatma gandhi Dr Cohl Furey is a Walter Grant Scott Fellow in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, and a member of Trinity Hall. Here, she tells us about the elegance of mathematical physics, which 'gets better and better the further you go.'.Since , she has been at the Humboldt University of Berlin on a Freigeist Fellowship by the Volkswagen Foundation.[1][6]
Her main interests are division algebras, Clifford algebras, and Jordan algebras, and their relation to particle physics. Her work focuses on finding an underlying mathematical structure to the Standard Model of particle physics.
She is most noted for her work on octonions.[7][8][9]
She has worked on attempting to obtain the Standard Model of particle physics from octonionic constructions.[2][7][9] In her paper "SU(3)C × SU(2)L × U(1)Y (× U(1)X) as a symmetry of division algebraic ladder operators,"[10] according to Quanta Magazine, "she consolidated several findings to construct the full Standard Model symmetry group, SU(3) × SU(2) × U(1), for a single generation of particles, with the math producing the correct array of electric charges and other attributes for an electron, neutrino, three up quarks, three down quarks and their anti-particles.
The math also suggests a reason why electric charge is quantized in discrete units — essentially, because whole numbers are."[2] In together with Mia Hughes, she linked the symmetry breaking in physics to division algebras including octonions.[11]
Media recognition
In , listed her in their article "10 Women in Science and Tech Who Should Be Household Names".[12]
Notable publications
- Furey, Nichol; Hughes, Mia J.
(). "Division algebraic symmetry breaking". Physics Letters B. : arXiv BibcodePhLBF. doi/tb ISSN
- C. Furey, "Three generations, two unbroken gauge symmetries, and one eight-dimensional algebra", Phys. Lett. B, () p. (See addendum, arXiv version
- C. Furey, "SU(3)C × SU(2)L × U(1)Y (× U(1)X) as a symmetry of division algebraic ladder operators", Eur.
Phys. J. C, 78 5 ()
- C. Furey, "A demonstration that electroweak theory could violate parity automatically (leptonic case)", Int. J. Mod. Phys. A, ()
- C.
How the Laws of Nature Could Be Defined by Octonions: Cohl Furey, a mathematical physicist at the University of Cambridge, is finding links between the Standard Model of particle physics and the octonions, numbers whose multiplication rules are encoded in a triangular diagram called the Fano plane.
Furey, "Standard model physics from an algebra?", PhD thesis, University of Waterloo, [arXiv]
- C. Furey, "Charge quantization from a number operator", Phys. Lett. B, (), pp.–
- C. Furey, "Generations: Three prints, in colour", JHEP 10 () [arXiv hep-th]
- C.
Cohl Furey facts for kids - Kids encyclopedia
Cohl Furey, also known as Nichol Furey, [1] is a Canadian mathematical physicist. [2][3] Furey has a bachelor's degree in mathematics and physics from Simon Fraser University (), Master's degree from the University of Cambridge () and a Ph.D in theoretical physics from the University of Waterloo (). [4].Furey, "Towards a unified theory of ideals", Phys. Rev. D 86 () , [arXiv hep-th]
- Furey, DeBenedictis, "Wormhole throats in Rm gravity", Class. Quantum Grav. 22 () –, [arXiv:gr-qc/]
References
- ^ abDeffke, Uta.
"The octave magician: Nichol (Cohl) Furey is a researcher at IRIS Adlershof". .
Cohl furey biography of mahatma Cohl Furey, also known as Nichol Furey, [1] is a Canadian mathematical physicist. [2][3] Furey has a bachelor's degree in mathematics and physics from Simon Fraser University (), Master's degree from the University of Cambridge () and a Ph.D in theoretical physics from the University of Waterloo (). [4].Berlin: Adlershof Journal.
- ^ abcWolchover, Natalie (July 20, ). "The Peculiar Math That Could Underlie the Laws of Nature". Archived from the original on 21 March
- ^Wolchover, Natalie (December 21, ).
"The Year in Physics". Archived from the original on 24 April
- ^"N. Furey - CV"(PDF). Retrieved
- ^"Women in STEM: Dr Cohl Furey; University of Cambridge". April 24, Archived from the original on 24 April
- ^"Project description: In-depth study into the algebraic structure of elementary particle physics".
VolkswagenStiftung. Retrieved
- ^ abFurey, Cohl (). "Unified theory of ideals". Physical Review D. 86 (2): arXiv BibcodePhRvDbF.Cohl furey biography of mahatma gandhi Cohl Furey, a mathematical physicist at the University of Cambridge, is finding links between the Standard Model of particle physics and the octonions, numbers whose multiplication rules are encoded in a triangular diagram called the Fano plane.
doi/PhysRevD S2CID
- ^Furey, C. J. (). "Generations: three prints, in colour". Journal of High Energy Physics. (10): arXiv BibcodeJHEPF.
- The peculiar numbers that could underlie the laws of nature
doi/JHEP10() S2CID
- ^ abFurey, Cohl (). "Three generations, two unbroken gauge symmetries, and one eight-dimensional algebra". Physics Letters B. : 84– arXiv BibcodePhLBF. doi/tb S2CID
- ^Furey, Cohl (). "SU(3)C × SU(2)L × U(1)Y (× U(1)X) as a symmetry of division algebraic ladder operators".
- Cohl Furey facts for kids - Kids encyclopedia
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- [1611.09182] Standard model physics from an algebra? - arXiv.org
European Physical Journal C. 78 (5): arXiv doi/epjc/s PMC PMID
- ^Brooks, Michael (August ). "Octonions: The strange maths that could unite the laws of nature (=Reality's hidden depths)". New Scientist. (): 38– doi/S(22)
- ^Dreyfuss, Emily (March 8, ). "10 Women in Science and Tech Who Should Be Household Names; WIRED".
Archived from the original on 8 March