Generated by GPT-5-mini| Dmitry Gaiotto | |
|---|---|
| Name | Dmitry Gaiotto |
| Occupation | Theoretical physicist |
Dmitry Gaiotto is a theoretical physicist known for contributions linking quantum field theory, string theory, and mathematical physics. His work intersects topics developed in collaborations across institutions and collaborations with researchers in high energy physics and geometry. Gaiotto's research has influenced developments in conformal field theory, supersymmetry, and duality frameworks.
Gaiotto was born and raised in a period shaped by global academic exchange among institutions such as Princeton University, Harvard University, University of Cambridge, Columbia University, and University of California, Berkeley. His undergraduate and graduate formation involved mentors and peers connected to programs at Institute for Advanced Study, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, CERN, Max Planck Institute for Physics, and École Normale Supérieure. During his formative years he engaged with seminar series and workshops held at Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, Stanford University, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Gaiotto has held research and faculty positions affiliated with research centers including Harvard University, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Institute for Advanced Study, CERN, Caltech, and Columbia University. He has collaborated with scholars associated with Stanford University, University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Princeton University, and University of Chicago. His teaching and mentorship activities connected him to graduate programs at California Institute of Technology, Yale University, New York University, University of California, Berkeley, and Cornell University. He has been a frequent participant in conferences organized by International Congress of Mathematicians, Strings Conference, SUSY Conference, Conference on Quantum Field Theory, and Geometry and Physics Workshop.
Gaiotto's research advanced topics at the intersection of conformal field theory, supersymmetric gauge theory, string theory, M-theory, and mathematical physics with impacts on frameworks developed by researchers at Seiberg–Witten theory, AdS/CFT correspondence, AGT correspondence, S-duality, and topological field theory. He produced influential constructions connecting 4-dimensional N=2 supersymmetry landscapes to 2-dimensional Liouville theory and to moduli spaces studied by groups at Oxford University, Cambridge University, and Institute des Hautes Études Scientifiques. His collaborations intersect with work by scholars from Nathan Seiberg, Edward Witten, Juan Maldacena, Greg Moore, and Anton Kapustin, and his papers have been discussed in seminars at Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, CERN, and Princeton University. Gaiotto helped formalize families of quantum field theories labeled by punctured Riemann surfaces studied in contexts related to Teichmüller space, Hitchin moduli space, Geometric Langlands, and hyperkähler geometry, building on methods from Donaldson theory and Seiberg–Witten invariants. His work also influenced developments in dualities linking constructions in Type IIB string theory, M-theory, and brane engineering frameworks explored at Caltech and Stanford University.
Gaiotto's contributions have been recognized through invitations and honors from organizations such as Royal Society, American Physical Society, International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Simons Foundation, European Research Council, and Kavli Foundation. He has been invited to deliver plenary and named lectures at venues including International Congress on Mathematical Physics, Strings Conference, ICMP, Mathematical Congresses, and universities like Harvard University, Princeton University, University of Cambridge, Oxford University, and ETH Zurich. His research has been highlighted in prizes and fellowships awarded by institutions connected to Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Institute for Advanced Study, Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, and national science academies.
Gaiotto's selected works and talks have been circulated through major preprint and journal outlets associated with Physical Review Letters, Journal of High Energy Physics, Communications in Mathematical Physics, Advances in Theoretical and Mathematical Physics, and proceedings of Strings Conference and SUSY Conference. Notable papers and lecture series relate to subjects developed alongside researchers from Edward Witten, Nathan Seiberg, Greg Moore, Juan Maldacena, and Anton Kapustin, and have been presented at institutions including Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Institute for Advanced Study, CERN, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, and Simons Center for Geometry and Physics. His outputs have been cited in research on AGT correspondence, Seiberg–Witten theory, AdS/CFT correspondence, Hitchin systems, and Geometric Langlands.
Category:Theoretical physicists