Paul Frampton

Paul Howard Frampton (born 31 October 1943) is an English particle phenomenologist. From 1996 until 2014, he was the Louis D. Rubin, Jr. Distinguished Professor of physics and astronomy, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is currently affiliated with the Department of Mathematics and Physics of the University of Salento, in Italy.[1]

Paul Frampton
UNC Faculty image of Paul Frampton uploaded in 2006
Born (1943-10-31) 31 October 1943
Kidderminster, England
Alma materBrasenose College, Oxford
Known forModel building
Scientific career
FieldsParticle phenomenology
Institutions
Doctoral advisorJohn C. Taylor

Early life

Born in Kidderminster, England, Frampton attended King Charles I School, 1954–62 and then Brasenose College, Oxford, 1962–68. He received BA (Double First) in 1965, MA, DPhil in 1968, and DSc in 1984, degrees from Oxford.

Career

He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1990) and the American Physical Society (1981). In 1987 he was the project director for siting the Superconducting Supercollider, in North Carolina. A Festschrift for his 60th birthday has been published.[2]

His DPhil thesis analyzed the relationship between current algebra and superconvergence sum rules, and contained a 1967 sum rule. In 1970, he analyzed the absence of ghosts in the dual resonance model.

Three examples of his model building are the chiral color model, in 1987, which predicts axigluons; the 331 model, in 1992, which can explain the number of quark-lepton generations, and predicts bileptons; his proposal, in 1995, of the binary tetrahedral group as a flavor symmetry. All three serve as targets of opportunity for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). In 2002, he built a model relating matter–antimatter asymmetry in the early universe to measurements possible on Earth. In 2015, he showed that the 331-model predicts long-lived quarks accessible to Run 2 of the LHC.

In formal directions, three examples are that he calculated, in 1976, the rate of vacuum decay in quantum field theory; in 1982, he analyzed ten-dimensional gauge field theory, and its hexagon anomaly, precursor to the first superstring revolution; in 1988, he constructed the Lagrangian which describes the dynamics of the p-adic string.

For cosmology, two examples are, in 2007, he built a cyclic model which can solve a 75-year-old entropy problem; in 2010, he discussed how dark energy may be better understood by studying temperature and entropy. In 2015, he demonstrated how cyclic entropy can lead to flat geometry without an inflationary era and estimated the time until contraction to be close to one hundred times the present age of the universe. In 2015 he also proposed a novel theory of dark matter, where the dark matter constituents are primordial black holes with many solar masses.[3]

Drug smuggling conviction

In November 2012, Frampton was convicted of drug smuggling in Argentina and was sentenced to four years and eight months in detention.[4] He denied the charges and said that he was a victim of a scam wherein an impostor of an internationally known model on a dating website tricked him into transporting two kilos of cocaine hidden in the liner fabric of a suitcase.[5]

The prosecutor presented what he said were text messages, handwritten notes and emails sent by Frampton discussing the suitcase, the drugs, and their street value.[4][6][7][8] Frampton's statements that the prosecutor's evidence was laughable,[9] were translated in court as suggesting that the messages themselves had been intended as jokes.[8] A forensic psychologist diagnosed Frampton with schizoid personality disorder, which Frampton's attorneys argued rendered him to deliver poor judgment in practical matters and increased his gullibility.[10]

Soon after his arrest, his pay was stopped and he was placed on personal leave. The move was widely criticized by the academic community.[10][11] He was fired from his UNC post in 2014. On 16 June 2015 an appeals court in North Carolina unanimously ruled that his university violated its own policies by placing Frampton on unpaid leave while he awaited trial, and ordered the university to restore Frampton's back salary and benefits.[11] Frampton's account of these events was published in 2014.[9]

Publications

Frampton's first publication was Chirality Commutator and Vector Mesons, in 1967. He has published numerous articles on particle phenomenology. He was the author of a book[12] on string theory, in 1974 (2nd edition, 1986), when it was still named the dual resonance model. In 1986, he published a book[13] on quantum field theory (2nd edition 2000, 3rd edition 2008). A book[14] on cyclic cosmology, for the general public, was published in 2009. He has published over 450 scientific articles.

  • P.H. Frampton and Y. Nambu, "Asymptotic Behavior of Partial Widths in the Veneziano Model of Scattering Amplitudes", in Quanta, Wentzel Festschrift, Chicago U.P. (1970).
  • P.H. Frampton and T.W. Kephart, "Explicit Evaluation of Anomalies in Higher Dimensions", Phys. Rev. Lett. 50, 1343, 1347 (1983); Phys. Rev. D28, 1010 (1983).
  • P.H. Frampton and S.L. Glashow, "Chiral Color-An Alternative to the Standard Model", Phys. Lett. 190B, 157 (1987).
  • P.H. Frampton and Y. Okada, "Effective Scalar Field Theory of p-Adic String", Phys. Rev. D37, 3077 (1988).
  • P.H. Frampton, "Chiral Dilepton Model and the Flavor Question", Phys. Rev. Lett. 69, 2889 (1992).
  • P.H. Frampton and T.W. Kephart, "Simple Non-Abelian Finite Flavor Groups and Fermion Masses", Int. J. Mod. Phys. 10A 4689-4704 (1995).
  • P.H. Frampton, S.L. Glashow and T. Yanagida, "Cosmological Sign of Neutrino CP Violation", Phys. Lett. B548 119 (2002).
  • L.Baum and P.H. Frampton, "Turnaround in Cyclic Cosmology", Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 071301 (2007).
  • D.A. Easson, P.H. Frampton, and G.F. Smoot, "Entropic Accelerating Universe", Phys. Lett. B696, 273 (2011).
  • P.H. Frampton, K.J. Ludwick and R.J. Scherrer, "The Little Rip", Phys. Rev. D84, 063003 (2011).
  • P.H. Frampton, "Lepton Number Conservation, Long-Lived Quarks and Superweak Bileptonic Decays", Phys. Lett. B747, 187-189 (2015).
  • P.H. Frampton, "Cyclic Entropy: An Alternative to Inflationary Cosmology", Int. J. Mod. Phys. A (2015, in press).
  • P.H. Frampton, "Search for Dark Matter Constituents with Many Solar Masses". Mod. Phys. Lett. A31, 1650180 (2016). arXiv:1510.00400[hep-ph].
  • G.F. Chapline and P.H. Frampton, "Intermediate Mass MACHOs: A New Direction for Dark Matter Searches". JCAP 11,042 (2016). arXiv:1608.04297[gr-qc].

References

  1. "Curriculum Vitae paul frampton".
  2. Curtright, T.; Mintz, S.; Perlmutter, A. (2004). "La Belle Epoque of High Energy Physics and Cosmology". World Scientific Publishing Company.
  3. Frampton, Paul H.; Kawasaki, Masahiro; Takahashi, Fuminobu; Yanagida, Tsutomu T. (22 April 2010). "Primordial Black Holes as All Dark Matter". Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics. 2010 (4): 023. arXiv:1001.2308. doi:10.1088/1475-7516/2010/04/023. ISSN 1475-7516.
  4. Banks, Michael (22 November 2012). "Paul Frampton hit by 56-month drugs sentence". Physics World. Institute of Physics. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  5. Swann, Maxine (8 March 2013). "The Professor, the Bikini Model and the Suitcase Full of Trouble". New York Times. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  6. Price, Jay (23 May 2014). "UNC-CH fires physics professor jailed in Argentina". Raleigh News & Observer. Archived from the original on 25 May 2014. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  7. "University fires professor jailed after drug conviction in Argentina". The Australian. News Corp Australia. 27 May 2014. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  8. "UNC Physics Professor is Convicted of Drug Smuggling in Argentina" (PDF). APS News. 22 (1): 5. January 2013. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
  9. Frampton, Paul (2014). Tricked!: The story of an internet scam. ASIN B00RBVDAD0.
  10. Price, Jay (23 October 2012). "UNC professor Frampton asks for raise from Argentina jail". McClatchy D.C. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
  11. Blythe, Anne (16 June 2015). "UNC Physics Professor jailed in Argentina wins back pay". Raleigh News & Observer. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  12. Frampton, P.H. (1974). Dual Resonance Models. Frontiers in Physics, W. A. Benjamin. ISBN 978-0-8053-2581-2.
  13. Frampton, P.H. (1986). Gauge field theories. Frontiers in Physics, Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0-471-34783-5.
  14. Frampton, P.H. (2009). Did Time Begin? Will Time End?: Maybe the Big Bang never occurred. World Scientific Publishing Company. ISBN 978-981-4280-58-7.
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