Jacques Distler | |
Birth Date: | January 1, 1961 |
Birth Place: | Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Field: | physics, string theory |
Work Institutions: | University of Texas at Austin |
Alma Mater: | Harvard University |
Jacques Distler (born January 1, 1961) is a Canadian-born American physicist working in string theory. He has been a professor of physics at the University of Texas at Austin since 1994.
Distler was born to a Jewish family in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, where he attended Herzliah High School (Snowdon) along with noted Pediatric Researcher Daniel Wechsler. He attended Harvard University, also with Dan Wechsler, for both his bachelors and doctorate in physics. His 1987 thesis Compactified String Theories was supervised by Sidney Coleman.
Before going to Texas, he was assistant professor at Princeton University.
According to citation counts, his most influential publication is his 1989 paper on conformal field theory in two dimensions. His earliest paper is Gauge Invariant Superstring Field Theory, co-authored with André LeClair and published in 1986 in Nuclear Physics B.
He has studied the "landscape" of metastable vacua in string theory. In July 2005, he released a paper on this topic.[1] Professor Distler was a member of arXiv's physics advisory board.[2]
He has a blog Musings: Thoughts on Science, Computing, and Life on Earth, one of the first theoretical physics blogs in the world.
Distler maintains a webpage dedicated to his father, who was born in Poland and escaped the German slave camps of World War II.