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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Leo_KadanoffLeo Kadanoff - Wikipedia

    Leo Philip Kadanoff (January 14, 1937 – October 26, 2015) was an American physicist. He was a professor of physics (emeritus from 2004) at the University of Chicago and a former president of the American Physical Society (APS). He contributed to the fields of statistical physics, chaos theory, and theoretical condensed matter physics.

  2. Leo Philip Kadanoff (Nova Iorque, 14 de janeiro de 1937 – Chicago, 26 de outubro de 2015) foi um professor de física teórica da Universidade de Chicago e atual presidente American Physical Society. Leo Kadanoff possui importantes contribuições à física estatística, teoria do caos e física da matéria condensada.

  3. 2 de nov. de 2015 · By Kenneth Chang. Nov. 1, 2015. Leo P. Kadanoff, a physicist who provided critical insights into the transformations of matter from one state to another, died on Oct. 26 in Chicago. He was 78....

  4. 30 de out. de 2015 · The web page pays tribute to Leo Kadanoff, a renowned physicist who made groundbreaking contributions to statistical mechanics, condensed matter physics and nonlinear physics. It highlights his achievements, awards, teaching style and legacy at the University of Chicago.

  5. 8 de jan. de 2016 · Leo P. Kadanoff, who died on October 26, 2015, devoted his scientific life to trying to elucidate how much of the world can be understood using mathematical models. Historically, physics has addressed this problem by searching for fundamental laws that completely specify the right ingredients to put into a theoretical model.

  6. 1 de abr. de 2016 · Leo Philip Kadanoff. Kadanoff was born in New York City on 14 January 1937. He grew up in the same apartment building on 204th Street as Roy Glauber, his future thesis adviser, and lived about half a block from Gordon Baym, his future collaborator.

  7. 1 Introduction. Leo Kadanoff has worked in many fields of Statistical Mechanics. He started out in working on superconductivity in a thesis under the supervision of Paul Martin at Harvard. Leo and Gordon Baym developed self-consistent approximations which preserved the conservation laws [ 4 ].