Aron Wall (original) (raw)

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Theoretical physicist

Aron Clark Wall is an American theoretical physicist, specializing in quantum gravity. He is Professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of Cambridge, and is one of the winners of the 2019 New Horizons in Physics Prize.[1]

Biography and education

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He was born on June 7, 1984, the son of programmer Larry Wall. He received a B.A. in liberal arts in 2005 from St. John's College (Annapolis/Santa Fe) and a Ph.D. in physics in 2011 from the Maryland Center for Fundamental Physics of the University of Maryland, College Park, under advisor Ted Jacobson.

From 2011 to 2014 he was a Simons postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, Santa Barbara, from 2014 to 2017 a fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, from 2017 to 2019 a fellow at the Stanford Institute for Theoretical Physics. In 2019, he joined the Cambridge University Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics as a lecturer, and in 2024 he was promoted to professor of theoretical physics.

In 2016, together with Ping Gao and Daniel Louis Jafferis [de], he proposed a mechanism for traversable wormholes without exotic matter.[2] It is based on the interpretation of wormholes as pairs of quantum entangled particles (EPR) by Leonard Susskind and Juan Martín Maldacena, known as the ER-EPR conjecture; however, Wall and colleagues did not use the usual Einstein-Rosen Bridges, but that their wormhole model provides a mathematically equivalent description to quantum teleportation.[3]

Most cited peer-reviewed publications

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According to his website, he is active in the New Life Church of the Nazarene.[5]

  1. ^ Aron Wall - 2019 New Horizons in Physics Prize
  2. ^ Natalie Wolchover: Newfound Wormhole Allows Information to Escape Black Holes, Quanta Magazine, October 23, 2017
  3. ^ University, Stanford (2018-10-17). "Aron Wall wins Breakthrough New Horizons Prize". Stanford News. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Google Scholar user page [1]. Accessed Oct. 30, 2021
  5. ^ Personal homepage