Thomas Spencer
American mathematical physicist

Thomas Spencer

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
American mathematical physicist
A.K.A.
Thomas C. Spencer
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
24 December 1946(New York City, New York, USA)
Star sign:
Education:
New York University
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Career Research Awards and honors
The details
Biography

Introduction

Thomas C. Spencer (born December 24, 1946) is an American mathematical physicist, known in particular for important contributions to constructive quantum field theory, statistical mechanics, and spectral theory of random operators. He is an emeritus faculty member at the Institute for Advanced Study.

Career

Spencer earned his doctorate in 1972 from New York University with a dissertation titled Perturbation of the Po2 Quantum Field Hamiltonian written under the direction of James Glimm. Since 1986, he has been a faculty member in the School of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced Study.

Research

  • Together with James Glimm and Arthur Jaffe he invented the cluster expansion approach to quantum field theory that is widelyused in constructive field theory.
  • Together with Jürg Fröhlich and Barry Simon, he invented the approach of the infrared bound, which has now become a classical tool to derive phase transitions in various models of statistical mechanics.
  • Together with Jürg Fröhlich, he devised a 'multi-scale analysis' to provide, for the first time, mathematical proofs of: the Kosterlitz–Thouless transition, the phase transition in the one-dimensional ferromagnetic Ising model with interactions Jx,y|xy|2{\displaystyle J_{x,y}\sim |x-y|^{-2}} and Anderson localization in arbitrary dimension.
  • Together with David Brydges, he proved that the scaling limit of the self-avoiding walk in dimension greater or equal than 5 is Gaussian, with variance growing linearly in time. To achieve this result, they invented the technique of the lace expansion that since then has had wide application in probability on graphs.

Awards and honors

Spencer is a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences, and the recipient of the Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics (joint with Jürg Fröhlich, "For their joint work in providing rigorous mathematical solutions to some outstanding problems in statistical mechanics and field theory.").