Ingemar Bengtsson

My name is Ingemar Bengtsson, and I have been a lecturer at Fysikum in Stockholm since '93 (and a professor since '00). My previous "career" was at Chalmers, CERN and Imperial College.

This is me (as drawn by Jörgen Hansson in '73)

The research areas that I like the best usually have something to do with geometry. General relativity is a favourite. Most of my work there is on black holes. My strongest prejudice is that the world has four dimensions; this is the direction in which I look for clues about quantum gravity. Then I work on quantum information theory, since the geometry of the space of quantum states is wonderful and rather mysterious. What I find fascinating about relativity and quantum mechanics---as it happens, the two deepest theories we have---is that their basic equations have been around for almost a hundred years, and yet they keep springing conceptual surprises on us. I am looking for the next surprise (but I do keep a weather eye open on other subjects as well).

I am told that some scientists think that there is something queer going on in the Universe while others, on the whole, don't. I tend towards the former viewpoint, but this is probably not apparent from my published papers.
Some examples of those are:

 

Of course, not all my papers are published.

 

With Karol Zyczkowski from Cracow I have written a book on quantum mechanics, seen through our eyes. It was published by Cambridge University Press in April 2006. I am afraid the hard cover edition is sold out, but a paperback edition is available.

 

I occasionally try to write popular science articles. They are all in Swedish:

 

I organize a seminar in theoretical physics together with Edwin Langmann from KTH, Eddy Ardonne from Nordita, and Marcus Berg from SU, Wednesdays at 11 o'clock, usually in FA31. You can find out who the next speaker is, and if the place really is FA31, at agenda.albanova.se , under "Seminars --- Theoretical Physics seminars". In the fall of 2010 Mohamed Bourennane, Gunnar Björk, and I will organize a Nordita workshop in quantum information, together with an major conference (October 4-8).

My views on teaching happen to be identical to those of Fred Hoyle, as expressed in "
The Universe: Past and present reflections " (Ann. Rev. Astr. Astrophys. 1982), so there is no need to repeat them here.

This academic year I teach Statistical physics and Analytical mechanics. (I expect to teach in English, since I expect English speaking students.)

·  Statistisk fysik I, starts January 2010. My lectures follow a book---a splendid book---by Manfred Schroeders, "An Introduction to Thermal Physics", especially part III, and parts of chapter 5. I assume that the participants have some familiarity with parts I and II of the book, but not that they have understood them perfectly. The program for this year's course (including exercises): Statistical Physics. You can also see some old exams if you like: Exams.

·  Analytisk mekanik, starts January 2010. The official book is är Goldstein, Poole och Safko: Classical Mechanics, tredje upplagan. The book is rather verbose, and in fact my course will follow my own lecture notes (see below). The program including exercises for 2010 is here: Analytical Mechanics. You can see some old exams if you like (there were bonus points for those who did their hand-in exercises): Exams.

Examples of lecture notes:

 

I enjoy supervising Master's Theses and such things. Some recent ones include “The convex hull of spin coherent states” by

Muhammad Sadiq, "Conformal compactification and anti-de Sitter space" by Valentina Di Carlo, "Gleason's theorem" by Helena Granström, "The rotationally invariant dispersion measure" by Ahmed Abdelrahman, and "Squashing anti-de Sitter space" by Patrik Sandin. My graduate student is Kate Blanchfield.

My Erdös number is 3. My Einstein number is 4. And one more thing. A quote from James Lovelock, which I have already had occasion to think about:

"Of all the prizes that come from surviving more than fifty years, the best is the freedom to be eccentric."

 


Email:

ingemar@physto.se

Finally, this link is for some test purpose only:

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Test