Josef-Maria Jauch
Josef Maria Jauch | |
|---|---|
| Born | 20 September 1914 Lucerne, Switzerland |
| Died | 30 August 1974 Geneva, Switzerland |
| Citizenship | Swiss, American |
| Alma mater | University of Minnesota |
| Known for | Jauch-Piron theorem, Jauch's theorem |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Quantum electrodynamics, foundations of quantum theory, gauge theory |
| Thesis | On Contact Transformations and Group Theory in Quantum Mechanical Problems (1940) |
| Doctoral advisor | Edward Lee Hill |
| Other academic advisors | Wolfgang Pauli |
| Doctoral students | Constantin Piron, Kenneth Watson |
Josef Maria Jauch (September 20, 1914 in Lucerne – August 30, 1974 in Geneva) was a Swiss/American theoretical physicist, known for his work on quantum electrodynamics and on the foundations of quantum theory, and leader of the "Geneva School" of mathematical physics.