Fredrik "Fred" Zachariasen (1931–1999) was an American theoretical physicist, known for his collaborative work with Murray Gell-Mann,[3]Sidney Drell,[4] and others.
Fredrik Zachariasen graduated in 1951 with BS in physics from the University of Chicago[5] and in January 1956 with PhD from Caltech with thesis Photodisintegration of the deuteron.[6] He was a postdoc from 1955 to 1956 at MIT, from 1956 to 1957 at the University of California, Berkeley, and from 1957 to 1958 at Stanford University, where he was an assistant professor from 1958 to 1960.
Career
In 1960 he joined the faculty of Caltech and remained there until he retired in September 1999 as professor emeritus.[5] In 1960 he was a Sloan Research Fellow.
At a memorial service at the Athenaeum January 9, Zachariasen’s colleagues, friends, and family celebrated his life: his work in physics, his wide-ranging interests, his love of travel, of the outdoors, of good conversation, good food and, especially, good wine, and his passion to “solve the world.”[7]
Ball-Baker-Zachariasen (BBZ) formulation
In a long series of papers and a review article, Baker, Ball, Zachariasen ... and co-workers have postulated a dual form of QCD in the continuum. Their formulation describes a non-Abelian dual superconductor and hence it confines color. They have calculated flux tubes, static quark potentials, temperature dependent effects and many other quantities in the tree approximation.[8]
^Guth, Eugene (June 1962). "Review of Electromagnetic Structure of Nucleons by S. Drell and F. Zachariasen". Physics Today. 15 (6): 62 & 64. doi:10.1063/1.3058232.