Francesco Calogero


Francesco Calogero is an Italian physicist, active in the community of scientists concerned with nuclear disarmament.

Biography

He is the son of the philosopher Guido Calogero. After his father was sentenced to national exile by fascist police, Francesco Calogero spent more than one year in Scanno, a small Italian village. After World War II, Calogero graduated "laurea in fisica" cum laude at University of Rome La Sapienza, on February 1958. He became Professor of Theoretical Physics, in the same university in 1976.

Physics research

Calogero's scientific publications in English include five books and over 400 papers. His main research concerns integrable many-body problems. Several solvable many-body models and nonlinear evolution partial differential equations are named after Calogero in the mathematical physics literature. He also formulated the Calogero conjecture that quantum behavior is caused by the stochastic component of the local gravitational field due to the chaotic component of the motion of all particles of the Universe due to their mutual gravitational interaction.
He also introduced a novel differential algorithm to evaluate all the zeros of any generic polynomial of arbitrary degree .
For his profound contributions to the field of exactly solvable models in statistical mechanics and many-body physics, Calogero was a co-recipient of the American Physical Society's 2019 Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics, alongside T. Bill Sutherland and Michel Gaudin.

Peace activism

Calogero served as Secretary-General of Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs from 1989 to 1997, and from 1997 to 2002 as chair of the Pugwash Council, of which he still is an "ex-officio" member. He published nearly 400 papers and several books on world affairs.
He was a member of the Governing Board of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute from 1982 to 1992.
He accepted on behalf of Pugwash the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize, jointly awarded to Pugwash and to Joseph Rotblat.