Tony Rothman

Tony Rothman (born 1953) is an American theoretical physicist, academic and writer.[2]

Tony Rothman
Born29 April 1953 (1953-04-29) (age 70)[1]
Philadelphia
Occupation
GenreScience fiction (hard SF), popular science
Website
www.tonyrothman.com

Early life

Tony is the son of physicist and science fiction writer Milton A. Rothman and psychotherapist Doris W. Rothman. He holds a B.A. from Swarthmore College, (1975) and a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin (1981), where he studied at the Center for Relativity, supervised by its long-time director Richard Matzner. He continued on post-doctoral fellowships at Oxford, Moscow State University and the University of Cape Town.

Career

Rothman worked briefly as an editor at Scientific American, then taught at Harvard, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bryn Mawr College and from 2005 to 2013 at Princeton University. In January 2016 he joined the faculty of NYU Polytech, now known as the Tandon School of Engineering and retired from teaching there in 2019.

Rothman's scientific research has been concerned mainly with general relativity and cosmology, for which he has made contributions to the study of the early universe, specifically cosmic nucleosynthesis, black holes, inflationary cosmology and gravitons.

Rothman was the scientific editor for Andrei Sakharov's Memoirs and he has contributed to numerous magazines, including Scientific American, Discover, American Scientist, The New Republic and History Today. He has played oboe at a professional level and commissioned a concerto from Alexander Raskatov.

Selected works

Tony Rothman's first book,[3] written just after graduating college, was The World is Round (Ballantine, 1978), a science fiction novel about the evolution of society on a non-earthlike planet. His experiences in Russia resulted in publication of a collection of short stories entitled Censored Tales (1989). He has also published six books of popular science and science history. His collection A Physicist on Madison Avenue (1991) was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, while Doubt and Certainty, with George Sudarshan, was chosen by the A-List as one of the 200 best books of 1998. He co-authored Sacred Mathematics: Japanese Temple Geometry with Fukagawa Hidetoshi.[4] Published in 2008, this was the first history of sangaku in English, and won the Association of American Publisher's 2008 PROSE award for Professional and Scholarly Excellence in mathematics. His play The Magician and the Fool, about Pushkin and Galois, won the 1981 Oxford Experimental Theatre Club competition, and his play The Sand Reckoner, about Archimedes, received a staged reading at Harvard in 1995. He has also written five other plays, on mathematical and musical subjects.

Rothman's published writings encompass hundreds of works in 7 languages and include 3,073 library holdings.[5]

  • 2022 A Little Book about the Big Bang
  • 2016 Physics Mastery
  • 2015 The Course of Fortune
  • 2015 Firebird
  • 2008 Sacred Mathematics: Japanese Temple Geometry (with Hidetoshi Fukagawa)
  • 2003 Everything's relative: and other fables from science and technology
  • 1998 Doubt and certainty: the celebrated academy (with E.C.G. Sudarshan)
  • 1995 Instant physics: from Aristotle to Einstein, and beyond
  • 1991 A physicist on Madison Avenue
  • 1989 Science à la mode: physical fashions and fictions
  • 1989 Censored tales
  • 1985 Frontiers of modern physics: new perspectives on cosmology, relativity, black holes, and extraterrestrial intelligence
  • 1978 The World is Round

Notes

  1. "SFE: Rothman, Tony".
  2. Lifeboat Foundation: Advisory Board, Tony Rothman bio notes Archived 2010-02-14 at the Wayback Machine
  3. The World is Round became my first work accepted for publication and my second work to appear. Tony Rothman (1996). "The World is Round". Archived from the original on 11 September 2006.
  4. Boutin, Chad. "Rothman helps reveal intricacies of ancient math phenomenon," Princeton Weekly Bulletin. June 5, 2006.
  5. WorldCat Identities: Rothman, Tony
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