Thomas Carlos Mehen
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Tom Mehen | |
|---|---|
| Born | September 8, 1970 |
| Died | December 29, 2024 (aged 54) |
| Education | University of Virginia Johns Hopkins University |
| Children | 3 |
| Awards | DOE Outstanding Junior Investigator Award |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Nuclear physics Quantum chromodynamics Effective field theory |
| Institutions | Duke University Duke Kunshan University California Institute of Technology Ohio State University |
| Thesis | Phenomenology of heavy quarks and quarkonium |
| Academic advisors | Adam Falk |
Thomas Carlos Mehen (September 8, 1970 - December 29, 2024) was an American physicist.[1] His research consisted of primarily quantum chromodynamics (QCD) and the application of effective field theory to problems in hadronic physics.[2] He also worked on effective field theory for non-relativistic particles whose short range interactions are characterized by a large scattering length, as well as novel field theories which arise from unusual limits of string theory. He died of natural causes on December 29, 2024.[3]
Mehen was born in Tegucigalpa, Honduras where he learned Spanish as his first language. His parents were Thomas and Elizabeth Mehen.[4] In 1974 at the age of three he relocated with his family to McLean, Virginia, USA.
Career
Mehen was educated at the University of Virginia (B.S., 1992), and Johns Hopkins University (M.A., Ph.D., 1998).[5] He served as a research associate and John A. McCone Postdoctoral Scholar in the Division of Mathematics, Physics and Astronomy at the California Institute of Technology from 1997 to 2000. He served as a research associate and University Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Physics at the Ohio State University from 2000–2001. In 2002 he joined the Department of Physics at Duke University as assistant professor,[6] being promoted up to full professor in 2016. He also served as a visiting professor at Duke Kunshan University.[7][8]
In 2005 Mehen received an Outstanding Junior Investigator Award in Nuclear Physics by the United States Department of Energy.[9] He contributed almost 100 published works and was a lecturer in his field.[10][11]