Clifford Martin Will
Clifford Martin Will is a Canadian-born theoretical physicist noted for his contributions to general relativity.
Life and work
Will was born in Hamilton, Ontario. In 1968, he earned a B.Sc. from McMaster University. At California Institute of Technology, he studied under Kip Thorne, earning his Ph.D. in 1971. He has taught at the University of Chicago and Stanford University, and in 1981 joined the faculty of Washington University in St. Louis. In 2012, he moved to a faculty position at the University of Florida.Will's theoretical work has centered on post-Newtonian expansions of approximate solutions to the Einstein field equations, a notoriously difficult area which forms the theoretical underpinnings essential for such achievements as the indirect verification by Russell Hulse and Joseph Taylor of the existence of gravitational radiation from observations of a binary pulsar.
Will's book reviewing experimental tests of general relativity is widely regarded as the essential resource for research in this area; his popular book on the same subject was listed by The [New York Times] as one of the 200 best books published in 1986.
Will was a Guggenheim Fellow for the academic year 1996–1997. From 2009 to 2018, Will was the editor-in-chief of IOP Publishing's journal Classical and [Quantum Gravity].
Honors and awards
He was elected a Fellow of [the American Physical Society] in 1989 and elected to the United States [National Academy of Sciences|National Academy of Sciences] in 2007.In 2019, Will received the Albert Einstein Medal, awarded each year since 1979 by the Albert Einstein Society in Bern, Switzerland, for his "important contributions to General Relativity, in particular including the Post-Newtonian expansions of approximate solutions of the Einstein field equations and their confrontation with experiments."