Richard Matzner
Richard Matzner | |
|---|---|
| Alma mater | University of Notre Dame University of Maryland |
| Known for | Binary Black Hole Grand Challenge Alliance |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | General relativity Numerical relativity Cosmology Astrophysics |
| Institutions | University of Texas at Austin |
| Doctoral advisor | Charles Misner |
| Other academic advisors | John Wheeler |
| Doctoral students | Benjamin Schumacher Ignazio Ciufolini Tony Rothman Premana Premadi |
Richard Alfred Matzner is an American physicist, working mostly in the field of general relativity and cosmology, including numerical relativity, kinetic theory, black hole physics, and gravitational radiation. He is Professor of Physics at the University of Texas at Austin where he directed the Center for Relativity. In 1993 he organized and was Lead Principal Investigator of an NSF/ARPA funded computational Grand Challenge program involving ten university teams seeking computational descriptions for the interaction of black holes as potential sources for observable gravitational radiation. His work leading what became known as the Binary Black Hole Grand Challenge Alliance featured in Kip Thorne's Nobel Prize lecture, including when Matzner and Alliance collaborators wagered Thorne that numerical relativity would produce a simulated waveform comparable to observation prior to the first LIGO detection. Matzner and colleagues eventually won, Thorne saying he "conceded the bet with great happiness."