Lars Hedin
Lars Tore Hedin (February 4, 1930–2002) was a Swedish physicist working on condensed matter physics and emeritus professor of Lund University. He is known for the development of GW approximation based on the Hedin equations, named after him.[1] LifeLars Tore Hedin was born in Örebro, Sweden in 1930, son of engineers.[2][3] He studied undergraduate physics in KTH Royal Institute of Technology, obtaining a master degree in 1955.[2] He continued to work there writing a licenciate dissertation in 1960 on the elastic properties of crystals in 1960, advised by Lamek Hultén.[2] In 1960, he entered Uppsala University for his graduate studies,[2] working in the group of Per-Olov Löwdin.[1] There he became the PhD student of Stig Lundqvist working on many-body theory applied to condensed matter.[1][2] Hedin earned a grant to work at Argonne National Laboratory in United States between 1962 and 1964, going back to Sweden's Chalmers University of Technology afterwards, where Lundqvist had had been awarded a professorship.[2] Based on his work at Argonne, he wrote his thesis titled "Application of Many-Body Theory to the One-Electron Problem of Atoms, Molecules and Solids" on 30 October 1965.[2] Hedin had developed a model in 1965[4] which later became known as the GW approximation, where G is the many-body Green's function and W the screened interaction term.[1][5] The equations that he developed are called the Hedin equations.[6] The GW approximation became a competitor theory for density functional theory, also developed about the same time.[6] Due to its computational requirements, it was not until the 1980s that real materials were able to be studied using GW approximation.[2][5] Hedin work with Lundqvist at Chalmers, led to their review paper titled "Effects of Electron-electron and Electron-Phonon Interactions on the One-Electron States of Solids"[6] in 1970 which became the foundation for most of his work.[1][2] Their model became known internationally as the 'Swedish electron gas'.[7][6] The same year, Hedin became professor at Linköping University, but the year afterward he accepted a professorship at Lund University where he stablished his own group.[2] In 1994, he accepted the four year position of director of the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research in Stuttgart, Germany.[2] He returned to Lund University as emeritus.[3] Hedin used his GW method to study photoemission. He called this theory the 'blue electron theory',[1][2] which he explained as
Hedin also worked in X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS), introducing the local density approximation for the GW self energy.[1] Hedin was editor of Solid State Communications from 1971 to 1990.[3] Personal lifeHe married his wife Hillevi in 1953.[3] They had three daughters.[3] References
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