David I. Kaiser is an American physicist and historian of science. He is Germeshausen Professor of the History of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and a full professor in MIT's department of physics. He also served as an inaugural associate dean for MIT's cross-disciplinary program in Social and Ethical Responsibilities of Computing.[1]
Kaiser is the author or editor of several books on the history of science, including Drawing Theories Apart: The Dispersion of Feynman Diagrams in Postwar Physics (2005), How the Hippies Saved Physics: Science, Counterculture, and the Quantum Revival (2011),[2] and Quantum Legacies: Dispatches from an Uncertain World (2020).[3] He received the Apker Award[4] from the American Physical Society in 1993 and was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2010. His historical scholarship has been honored with the Pfizer Award (2007)[5] and the Davis Prize (2013)[6] from the History of Science Society. In March 2012 he was awarded the MacVicar fellowship, a prestigious MIT undergraduate teaching award.[7] In 2012, he also received the Frank E. Perkins Award from MIT for excellence in mentoring graduate students.[8]
Education
Kaiser completed his AB in physics at Dartmouth College in 1993. He completed two PhDs from Harvard University. The first was in physics in 1997 for a thesis entitled "Post-Inflation Reheating in an Expanding Universe," the second in the history of science in 2000 for a thesis on "Making Theory: Producing Physics and Physicists in Postwar America."[1]
Research
Kaiser's physics research mostly focuses on early-universe cosmology, including topics such as cosmic inflation,[9][10] post-inflation reheating,[11][12][13] and primordial black holes.[14][15][16] He has also helped to design and conduct novel experimental tests of quantum theory, including the "Cosmic Bell" experiments[17][18][19] that Kaiser worked on with Nobel laureate Anton Zeilinger,[20] and which were featured in the PBS Nova documentary film Einstein's Quantum Riddle (2019).[21]
^Amin, Mustafa A.; Hertzberg, Mark P.; Kaiser, David I.; Karouby, Johanna (2015). "Nonperturbative dynamics of reheating after inflation: A review". International Journal of Modern Physics D. 24 (1). arXiv:1410.3808. Bibcode:2015IJMPD..2430003A. doi:10.1142/S0218271815300037.
^Allahverdi, Rouzbeh; Amin, Mustafa A.; Berlin, Asher; Bernal, Nicholas; Byrnes, Christian T.; Delos, M. Sten; Erickcek, Adrienne L.; Escudero, Miguel; Figueroa, Daniel G.; Freese, Katherine; Harada, Tomohiro; Hooper, Dan; Kaiser, David I.; Karwal, Tanvi; Kohri, Kazunori; Krnjaci, Gordan; Lewicki, Marek; Lozanov, Kaloian D.; Poulin, Vivian; Sinha, Kuver; Smith, Tristan L.; Takahashi, Tomo; Tenkanen, Tommi; Unwin, James; Vaskonen, Ville; Watson, Scott (2021). "The First Three Seconds: A Review of Possible Expansion Histories of the Early Universe". The Open Journal of Astrophysics. 4 (1): 1. arXiv:2006.16182. Bibcode:2021OJAp....4E...1A. doi:10.21105/astro.2006.16182.
^Qin, Wenzer; Geller, Sarah R.; Balaji, Shyam; McDonough, Evan; Kaiser, David I. (2023). "Planck constraints and gravitational wave forecasts for primordial black hole dark matter seeded by multifield inflation". Physical Review D. 108 (4): 043508. arXiv:2303.02168. Bibcode:2023PhRvD.108d3508Q. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.108.043508.