Giorgio Parisi

Italian physicist
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Quick Facts
Born:
August 4, 1948, Rome, Italy (age 76)
Awards And Honors:
Nobel Prize (2021)

Giorgio Parisi (born August 4, 1948, Rome, Italy) is an Italian physicist who was awarded the 2021 Nobel Prize for Physics for his work on spin glasses, which proved widely applicable in the study of complex systems. He shared the prize with Japanese American meteorologist Syukuro Manabe and German oceanographer Klaus Hasselmann.

Parisi graduated from the University of Rome with a degree in physics in 1970, and from 1971 to 1981 he was a researcher at the National Laboratory of Frascati. He became a professor at the University of Rome in 1981.

Spin glasses are crystalline materials into which a few magnetic atoms are introduced. In a situation in which the magnetic atoms align themselves in the opposite way with respect to their neighbours (one atom points up and a second points down), a third atom would not be able to align itself opposite its two neighbours. Such a system is called “frustrated,” and its configuration was very difficult to calculate in the late 1970s when Parisi became interested in spin glasses as a result of his work on the theory of particle physics. He was interested in the “replica trick,” which used many replicas, or copies, of a physical system and then averaged them. The replica trick, however, gave unphysical results when applied to spin glasses. Parisi realized that spin glasses must have an infinite number of possible states, and he modified the replica trick by adding a new parameter that described how much two replicas resembled each other.

Michael Faraday (L) English physicist and chemist (electromagnetism) and John Frederic Daniell (R) British chemist and meteorologist who invented the Daniell cell.
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Parisi’s mathematical technique proved widely applicable to many other fields, including the famous graph theory problem of the traveling salesman, and the physics of granular materials such as sand. His books included Spin Glass Theory and Beyond: An Introduction to the Replica Method and Its Applications (1987; written with Marc Mézard and Miguel Ángel Virasoro), Statistical Field Theory (1988), Quantum Mechanics (2009; written with Gennaro Auletta and Mauro Fortunato), and Theory of Simple Glasses: Exact Solutions in Infinite Dimensions (2020; written with Pierfrancesco Urbani and Francesco Zamponi).

Erik Gregersen