词条 | Tony Skyrme |
释义 |
|name =Tony Hilton Royle Skyrme |image =File:Tony Skyrme.jpg| |image_size = 230px |caption = Tony Skyrme in 1946 |birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1922|12|05}} |birth_place = Lewisham, London, England |death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1987|6|25|1922|12|05}} |death_place = Birmingham |residence = United Kingdom |citizenship = |nationality = British |ethnicity = |fields = Mathematics and physics |workplaces = |alma_mater = |doctoral_advisor = |academic_advisors = |doctoral_students = |notable_students = |known_for = |author_abbrev_bot = |author_abbrev_zoo = |influences = |influenced = |awards = |religion = |signature = |footnotes = }} Tony Hilton Royle Skyrme ({{IPAc-en|s|k|ɜr|m}}; 5 December 1922, Lewisham – 25 June 1987) was a British physicist. He first proposed modeling the effective interaction between nucleons in nuclei by a zero-range potential,[1] an idea still widely used today in nuclear structure[2] and in equation of state for neutron stars.[3] However, he is best known for formulating the first topological soliton to model a particle, the skyrmion.[4] Some of his most important work can be found in selected papers.[5][6] Skyrme was awarded the Hughes Medal by the Royal Society in 1985. LifeTony Skyrme was born in Lewisham, London, the child of a bank clerk. He attended a boarding school in Lewisham and then won a scholarship to Eton public school. He excelled at mathematics and won several prizes in the subject at the school. He went on to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he again excelled, he passed part one of the mathematical tripos as a wrangler in 1942, and part three in 1943 with a first class degree. While there he was president of The Archimedeans mathematics society.[7] [8][9]With World War Two at its height after graduation he was drafted into war work as a mathematician under Rudolf Peierls who was leading a team working on the theoretical aspects of atomic energy, particularly as applied to atomic weapon Returning to Britain both he and Dorothy gained posts at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Harwell from 1950 to 1962. From 1954 he was head of the group there for theoretical nuclear physics, in which among others John Bell worked. Here he made two pioneering contributions to nuclear physics. One was to show how to handle short-range forces in a three-body problem. The other was a powerful approximation to nuclear forces, later widely used as the ‘Skyrme model’.[8][9] In 1962 he proposed a mathematical treatment of fundamental particles, in which particles such as neutron In 1958/59 he had travelled with his wife as tourists in a one-year overland circumnavigation of the globe by car and land rover. They fell in love with the lush tropical gardens of Malaysia and decided to settle there. In 1962 they left Harwell and Skyrme took up a post in the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur. He found this involved heavy lecturing commitments and was less than stimulating to his research work and by 1964 had returned to Britain to a post as professor of Mathematical Physics at the University of Birmingham where he remained for the rest of his career.[8][9] His hobbies were home electronics, he built his own television receiver and Hi-Fi in the 1950s, and gardening where he and Dorothy made an early attempt at self sufficiency.[9] Skyrme died on 25 June 1987 in Selly Oak Hospital, Birmingham, of an embolism after a routine operation.[8][9] References1. ^{{Cite journal| first1 = T. . | title = The effective nuclear potential | journal = Nuclear Physics| last1 = Skyrme | volume = 9| issue = 4 | pages = 615–634 | year = 1959 | doi = 10.1016/0029-5582(58)90345-6|bibcode = 1959NucPh...9..615S }} {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Skyrme, Tony}}2. ^{{Cite journal| first1 = M. .| first2 = P. H. | title = Self-consistent mean-field models for nuclear structure| last1 = Bender | journal = Reviews of Modern Physics | volume = 75 | pages = 121 | year = 2003 | doi = 10.1103/RevModPhys.75.121| last2 = Heenen| bibcode=2003RvMP...75..121B}} 3. ^{{cite book |title=Neutron Stars |author1=Haensel, P. |author2=Potekhin, A. Y. |author3=Yakovlev, D. G. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iIrj9nfHnesC&printsec=frontcover#PPA12,M1 |isbn=0-387-33543-9 |publisher=Springer |year=2007}} 4. ^{{Cite journal| first1 = T. . | title = A unified field theory of mesons and baryons | journal = Nuclear Physics| last1 = Skyrme | volume = 31 | pages = 556–569 | year = 1962 | doi = 10.1016/0029-5582(62)90775-7|bibcode = 1962NucPh..31..556S }} 5. ^{{cite book|last1=Skyrme and Gerald E. Brown|title=Selected Papers, with Commentary, of Tony Hilton Royle Skyrme|date=1994|publisher=World Scientific|isbn=9789812795922|pages=vi|url=https://books.google.com/?id=9gDwymeh0WIC|accessdate=1 February 2016}} 6. ^Brown, G. E. (ed.) (1994) Selected Papers, with Commentary, of Tony Hilton Royle Skyrme. World Scientific Series in 20th Century Physics: Volume 3. {{ISBN|978-981-4502-43-6}} 7. ^1 R. H. Dalitz, ‘An outline of the life and work of Tony Skyrme’, International Journal of Modern Physics, A, 3 (1988), 2719–44 · The Times (3 July 1987) · CGPLA Eng. & Wales (1987) 8. ^1 2 3 4 Rudolf Peierls, ‘Skyrme, Tony Hilton Royle (1922–1987)’, rev. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2007 9. ^1 2 3 4 5 50 Visions of Mathematics Ed by Dara O Briain, Chapter 10, page 38 by Alan Champneys, [https://books.google.com/books?id=Sg8NBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA38&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=4#v=onepage&q&f=false Tony Hilton Royle Skyrme], OUP Oxford, 2014, {{ISBN|9780191005336}} 6 : 1922 births|1987 deaths|British physicists|Particle physicists|Manhattan Project people|Nuclear physicists |
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