Tesseract
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Sean M. Carroll - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Sean Carroll – Preposterous Universe
www.preposterousuniverse.com
Sean Michael Carroll (born October 5, 1966) is a theoretical physicist specializing in quantum mechanics, gravity, and cosmology. He is a research professor in the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics in the California Institute of Technology Department of Physics[1] and an External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute.[2] He has been a contributor to the physics blog Cosmic Variance, and has published in scientific journals such as Nature as well as other publications, including The New York Times, Sky & Telescope, and New Scientist.
He has appeared on the History Channel's The Universe, Science Channel's Through the Wormhole with Morgan Freeman, Closer to Truth (broadcast on PBS),[3] and Comedy Central's The Colbert Report. Carroll is the author of Spacetime And Geometry, a graduate-level textbook in general relativity, and has also recorded lectures for The Great Courses on cosmology, the physics of time, and the Higgs boson.[4] He is also the author of four popular books: From Eternity to Here about the arrow of time, The Particle at the End of the Universe about the Higgs boson, The Big Picture: On the Origins of Life, Meaning, and the Universe Itself about ontology, and Something Deeply Hidden about the foundations of quantum mechanics. He began a podcast in 2018 called Mindscape, in which he interviews other experts and intellectuals coming from a variety of disciplines, including "science, society, philosophy, culture, arts, and ideas" in general.[5]
I'm interested in how the world works at the deepest levels, which leads me to do research in physics and philosophy. My current interests include quantum mechanics, gravitation, cosmology, statistical mechanics, and foundations of physics, with occasional dabblings elsewhere. My most recent book, Something Deeply Hidden, is about quantum mechanics, Many Worlds, and the emergence of spacetime. I host a podcast, Mindscape, where I interview smart people about all sorts of interesting ideas.
My official titles are Research Professor of Physics at Caltech and External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute. I live in Los Angeles with my lovely wife, writer Jennifer Ouellette.
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