Mirjam Cvetic

Slovene physicist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroSlovene physicist
A.K.A.Mirjam Cvetič-Krivec Mirjam Cvetič Krivec
A.K.A.Mirjam Cvetič-Krivec Mirjam Cvetič Krivec
PlacesSlovenia Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
isScientist Physicist Astronomer
Work fieldScience
Gender
Female
Birth1957
Age68 years
Education
University of MarylandCollege Park, Prince George's County, USA
University of LjubljanaLjubljana, Ljubljana City Municipality, Slovenia
Employers
University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia, Philadelphia County, USA
Awards
Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences2023
The details

Biography

Cvetič in 2012

Mirjam Cvetič is a Slovenian-American theoretical physicist at the University of Pennsylvania, where she is Fay R. and Eugene L. Langberg Professor of Physics and of Mathematics. Her research includes the applications of string theory and M-theory to black hole behavior and particle phenomenology, and she has published highly cited works on supersymmetry.

Education and career

Cvetič earned bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of Ljubljana in 1979 and 1981, respectively. She completed her doctorate at the University of Maryland, College Park in 1984. Her dissertation, Origin of Mass Hierarchies in Gauge Theories, was supervised by Jogesh Pati. After working as a researcher at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center and the University of Pennsylvania, she joined the University of Pennsylvania faculty in 1989. She became Class of 1965 Endowed Term Professor in 1999, and Fay R. and Eugene L. Langberg Endowed Chair in 2003.

As of 2020, she is the lead editor of Physical Review D. She is also a member and co-PI of the Simons Collaboration on Special Holonomy in Geometry, Analysis, and Physics.

Recognition

Cvetič was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2001, "for her work in a wide range of topics in supergravity and string theory, from non-perturbative gravitational effects such as black holes and domain walls to their phenomenological consequences". She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2023.

She won the University of Maryland Physics Distinguished Alumni Award in 2007. In 2019, the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation gave her their Carl Friedrich von Siemens Research Award, funding her for a visit to the Max Planck Institute for Physics.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 07 Jun 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.