In the early 1980s, he published an influential and widely cited review article on differential geometric methods in physics with Andrew J. Hanson and Peter Gilkey.[7] They extensively treated the physical applications of the Atiyah-Singer index theorem and related mathematical results.
With Hikaru Kawai, he developed the Eguchi-Kawai model for lattice theories with an SU(N)gauge group in the limit of large N.[8] They showed that in this limit the lattice gauge theory for an infinite lattice and unit cube are identical and that this correspondence can also be maintained in the continuum limit of the lattice. Spacetime is incorporated in this large N limit as though it were an internal degree of freedom.[9]
Awards
Eguchi shared second prize with Hanson in the 1979 Gravity Research Foundation competition.[10]
In 1984 he received the Nishina Prize, and in 2009, he received the Imperial Prize and the Prize of the Japanese Academy of Sciences.[11]
^Polchinski, Joseph Gerard (2002). String Theory: Superstring Theory and Beyond,Vol.2. Cambridge University Press. p. 309. ISBN9780521633048. OCLC910023992.