Biography:Hajo Leschke: Difference between revisions

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'''Hajo Leschke''' (born 1945 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wentorf_bei_Hamburg Wentorf bei Hamburg]) is a German mathematical physicist and semi-retired professor of theoretical physics at the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Erlangen–Nuremberg FAU] (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg). He is best known for some rigorous results on certain model systems in quantum (statistical) mechanics obtained by functional-analytic and probabilistic techniques (jointly with his students and other coworkers). His research topics include: Peierls Transition, Functional Formulations of Quantum and Stochastic Dynamics, Pekar–Fröhlich Polaron, Quantum Spin Chains, Feynman–Kac Formulas, (Random) Schrödinger Operators, Landau-Level Broadening, Lifschitz Tails, Anderson Localization, Fermionic Entanglement Entropies, Quantum Spin Glasses.
'''Hajo Leschke''' (born 1945 in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wentorf_bei_Hamburg Wentorf bei Hamburg]) is a German mathematical physicist and (semi-)retired professor of theoretical physics at the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Erlangen–Nuremberg FAU] (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg). He is best known for some rigorous results on certain model systems in quantum (statistical) mechanics obtained by functional-analytic and probabilistic techniques (jointly with his students and other coworkers). His research topics include: Peierls Transition, Functional Formulations of Quantum and Stochastic Dynamics, Pekar–Fröhlich Polaron, Quantum Spin Chains, Feynman–Kac Formulas, (Random) Schrödinger Operators, Landau-Level Broadening, Lifschitz Tails, Anderson Localization, Fermionic Entanglement Entropies, Quantum Spin Glasses.


=== Academic education ===
=== Academic education ===

Revision as of 08:09, 24 July 2024

Hajo Leschke (born 1945 in Wentorf bei Hamburg) is a German mathematical physicist and (semi-)retired professor of theoretical physics at the FAU (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg). He is best known for some rigorous results on certain model systems in quantum (statistical) mechanics obtained by functional-analytic and probabilistic techniques (jointly with his students and other coworkers). His research topics include: Peierls Transition, Functional Formulations of Quantum and Stochastic Dynamics, Pekar–Fröhlich Polaron, Quantum Spin Chains, Feynman–Kac Formulas, (Random) Schrödinger Operators, Landau-Level Broadening, Lifschitz Tails, Anderson Localization, Fermionic Entanglement Entropies, Quantum Spin Glasses.

Academic education

Leschke studied physics and mathematics at the Universität Hamburg and graduated with a diploma in physics (1970). The underlying thesis was supervised by Wolfgang Kundt (born 1931). He received his doctorate in physics (1975) with thesis supervisor Uwe Brandt (1944–1997) at the (Technische) Universität Dortmund, where he also earned the habilitation in physics (1981). His studies were supported by the Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes (German Academic Scholarship Foundation) and a Kurt-Hartwig-Siemers–Wissenschaftspreis on the recommendation of Pascual Jordan (1902-1980).

Internationally known students in Academia

His diploma and doctoral students Peter Müller (born 1967) and Simone Warzel (born 1973) are professors of mathematics in München/Garching at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität and the Technische Universität, respectively. Also his diploma students Dirk Hundertmark (born 1965, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie) and Bernhard G. Bodmann (born 1972, University of Houston Texas) are professors of mathematics.

External links