Amanda Weltman

Amanda Weltman
Born 1979 (age 3637)
Cape Cod, Massachusetts, United States
Nationality South African
Occupation Physicist
Known for Proposing "chameleon theory"
explaining dark energy

Amanda Weltman (born 1979) is a South African theoretical physicist. She is known for co-authoring a paper proposing the "chameleon theory" to explain the existence of dark energy. She is currently a researcher at the University of Cape Town.

Personal life and education

Weltman was born in 1979[1] in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and travelled to South Africa with her parents when she was two months old.[2] She spent her childhood in Johannesburg and Cape Town.[2][3] She was a competitive gymnast as a child.[2] She was first drawn to physics while she was an undergraduate student at the University of Cape Town.[4] Describing her attraction to being a physicist, she stated that "understanding the way the Universe worked was just about the coolest job anyone could have."[4]

In 2009, she completed her Ph.D in theoretical physics at Columbia University in New York. She was supervised by theoretical physicist Brian Greene.[3] She also did post-doctoral research at the University of Cambridge before returning to South Africa.[4] Her post-doctoral work was with the physicist Stephen Hawking.[5] She is currently part of a large research group at the University of Cape Town.[4]

She lives with her husband Jeff Murugan, who is a string theorist at the same university. She met him in 1999.[4] She has two children,[4] named Sacha Navi Wolf and Micah Lev.[3] She has stated that she was glad to be brought up in a family without gender stereotypes, and that barriers that female scientists faced were particularly harmful when they occurred in the form of stereotypes that children were exposed to.[4] She and her husband both take time off to care for their children, and frequently travel to conferences as a family.[4]

Research and career

Weltman became known when she co-authored a 2004 paper titled "Chameleon Cosmology" with Justin Khoury, which proposed a theory to explain dark energy.[4] She was a 24 year-old graduate student at Columbia University at the time.[4] Dark energy is proposed as an explanation for the accelerating expansion of the universe. Khoury and Weltman proposed the existence of a new force that drove this expansion, which changed depending on the environment it was in. It would be weak when particles were densely packed together, and strong when they were far apart.[4][6] Thus, the theory suggests that in regions where matter is relatively dense, the chameleon force is difficult to detect; but in empty regions of space, it acts to push bodies apart and expand the universe.[7] The theory was such that it could not be tested for ten years after it was proposed; however, in 2014 experimenters at the University of Nottingham developed a method that had the potential to test the theory.[6] The theory evolved by Khouri and Weltman has been described as leading to "entire sub-fields in cosmology and experimental physics."[8] Her work has been described as a continuation of the work of Albert Einstein.[9]

Awards and distinctions

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Sams-Ams 2011". Nmmu.ac.za. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Amanda Weltman | Next Einstein Forum". Nef.org. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 Chant, Ruth (12 December 2013). "Remarkable Journeys – Dr Amanda Weltman". Allianceofwomenscientists.com. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Nordling, Linda (7 March 2013). "Amanda Weltman: Driving Force". Nature. 495: 29–30. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
  5. "SA's future could be written in the stars". IOL. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  6. 1 2 Young, Monica. "Is Dark Energy a Chameleon?". Sky & Telescope.
  7. Belinda Smith is online editor at Cosmos. Follow (7 September 2015). "Hunting for dark energy | Cosmos". Cosmosmagazine.com. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  8. "Interview with an African genius: why the next Einstein will come from Africa, the surprising countries leading the way and what's holding us back". MG Africa. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  9. Siddle, Julian. "The 'next Einstein'? She's from Africa". Bbc.com. Retrieved 29 June 2016.

External links

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