H. R. Krishnamurthy

Hulikal Ramaiengar Krishnamurthy (born 1951) is an Indian theoretical physicist. He specializes in theoretical condensed matter physics, especially quantum many-body theory and statistical physics.[1] He was the chairman of the Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science.[2] He is one of the research scholars who worked under Prof. Kenneth G. Wilson. His main work was titled Renormalization Group Approach to the Anderson Model of Dilute Magnetic Alloys.[3]

Prof.

H. R. Krishnamurthy
Born1951
NationalityIndian
CitizenshipIndia
Alma materCornell University
Known forNumerical Renormalization Group, Anderson Impurity Model, High Tc Superconductors, Superfluidity, Ultracold Quantum Gases, Optical Lattices
Awards
  • 1967 National Science Talent Search Scholarship
  • 1970 Karnataka state Award
  • 1973 IBM Graduate Fellowship
  • 1983 Science Academy Medal for Young Scientists
  • 2000 DAE-Raja Ramanna Prize
  • 1983 IISc Alumni Award for Excellence in Research for Science
  • 2006 J C Bose National Fellowship, Department of Science and Technology, Government of India
  • 2016 CNR Rao Vijnana Puraskara
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Doctoral advisorKenneth G. Wilson, John W. Wilkins
Doctoral studentsMadan Rao, Pinaki Majumdar, Tathagat Avatar Tulsi
Websitehttp://www.physics.iisc.ac.in/~hrkrish/

Biography

Indian Institute of Science

Krishnamurthy obtained his BSc (Hons) in Physics (1970) from Bangalore University and MSc (Physics) (1972) from IIT, Kanpur. He studied in Cornell University (1972–76) as IBM fellow, working with Kenneth G. Wilson and John W. Wilkins. In his PhD thesis, he extended Wilson's numerical renormalization group solution for the Kondo problem to the symmetric Anderson impurity model.[4] The extension to the asymmetric case was completed during his post-doctoral tenure (1976–78) at the University of Illinois. Krishnamurthy returned to India and joined the Department of Physics, IISc, Bangalore (1978) and became a Professor (1996). He has held sabbatical positions at Princeton University, Harvard University, Ohio State University, University of Cincinnati, UC Davis and Georgetown University.

References


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