Professors of Physics, Graduate School of Science

Professors with 「*」 do not take graduate students.
Professors with 「#」 do not take master's graduate students.
Professors with 「!」 has spesial report.
SUBCOURSE NOTES NAME BUREAU URL E-mail THEME
A0 Takumi DOI The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research doi[at]ribf.riken.jp Nuclei and hadrons are basic constituents of matter. Then, how are nuclei and hadrons formed from elementary particles, quarks and gluons? Aiming at elucidation from the theory of "strong interaction", quantum chromodynamics (QCD), we conduct theoretical research mainly by numerical simulations using supercomputers.
A0 Kenji FUKUSHIMA Department of Physics fuku[at]nt.phys.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp We investigate various phenomena originating from the "strong interaction" that is associated with one of the most fundamental forces in nature. Quarks and gluons interact strongly to form hadrons such as pions, nucleons, and so on, and hadrons are constituents of any materials we know. From the same theory of the strong interaction, unexpectedly amusing physics can appear in special environments like high temperature, high density, or strong background (electromagnetic or gravitational) fields. We are pursuing novel phenomena based on this established and yet profound theory of the strong interaction.
A0 Haozhao LIANG Department of Physics https://tnp.phys.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/ haozhao.liang[at]phys.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp Our research mainly focuses on the nuclear many-body theories and the relevant interdisciplinary studies in nuclear physics, nuclear astrophysics, and particle physics. Key topics include: nuclear density functional theory (DFT), structure of exotic nuclei, hidden symmetries in atomic nuclei, nuclear collective excitations, nuclear weak-interaction processes and r-process nucleosynthesis, etc.
Professors with 「*」 do not take graduate students.
Professors with 「#」 do not take master's graduate students.
Professors with 「!」 has spesial report.