André Petermann
André Petermann | |
|---|---|
Petermann in 1954 | |
| Born | Andreas Emil Petermann September 27, 1922 |
| Died | August 21, 2011 (aged 88) |
| Alma mater | University of Lausanne |
| Known for | Renormalization group Beta function |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Theoretical physics |
| Thesis | La normalisation des constantes dans la théorie des quanta (1952) |
| Doctoral advisor | Ernst Stueckelberg |
Andreas Emil Petermann (27 September 1922– 21 August 2011), known as André Petermann, was a Swiss theoretical physicist known for introducing the renormalization group, suggesting a quark-like model, and work related to the anomalous magnetic dipole moment of the muon.
Petermann obtained his doctorate from the University of Lausanne in May 1952 under the supervision of professor Ernst Stueckelberg. The work was funded by the Swiss Atomic Energy Commission. Following Lausanne, Petermann moved on to the University of Manchester, UK, before he became a CERN staff member in 1955. The CERN Theory Division was at that time still hosted at the University of Copenhagen. It was then moved to Geneva together with the CERN experimental groups in 1957.