Ni Guangjiong

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Ni.

Ni Guangjiong (Chinese: 倪光炯; born December 29, 1934 in Ningbo, Zhejiang)[1] is a Chinese physicist and science writer.[2] He began studies in physics about 1950, and became a Doctor of Philosophy in 1955. He married Su Qing, a physics professor, in 1960. He published his first book in 1978.[3] He holds a Chair in Physics at Fudan University, Shanghai.[4] He is the director of Modern Physics Institute and the head of the Division for Theoretical Physics.

He is a specialist in quantum mechanics, field theory, and particle physics. His books include Modern Physics (1979), Methods of Mathematical Physics (1989), Levinson Theorem, Anomaly and Phase Transition of Vacuum (1995), Physics Changing the World (1998), and Advanced Quantum Mechanics (2000).

Accelerating universe : the role of the antimatter

Ni is studied by several authors in astrophysics and for the theories of the antimatter,[5][6] that he includes in the cosmological model that he proposes.

The theories of Ni about antimatter are also used for invariances of scale within the framework as Quantum tunnelling[7] and it is within the framework of this cosmological model that Ni develops an important part of his study with regard to the neutrinos.[8]

International works about a superluminal speed of the (muon) neutrino

Ni claimed to prove that the muon neutrino exceeded the speed of light in vacuum. He spent most of his career studying this.[9][10][11] This work was cited on many occasions by international teams of scientists[12][13] and in several anthologies.[14]

Distinctions

Ni received scientific awards recognized nationally in China, inter alia :

Guang-Jiong Ni has also been quoted in the field of philosophy[15] and by Siemens.[16]

Bibliography

Anthologies containing his writings

See also

References

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