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  1. William Allan Bardeen (born September 15, 1941, in Washington, Pennsylvania) is an American theoretical physicist who worked at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.

  2. During 1993-1994, he was Head of Theoretical Physics at the SSC Laboratory before its termination. He retired from Fermilab in December 2010. Bardeen was awarded the 1996 J.J. Sakurai Prize of the American Physical Society for his work on anomalies and perturbative quantum chromodynamics.

  3. William A. Bardeen's 101 research works with 10,450 citations and 1,552 reads, including: Instanton Triggered Chiral Symmetry Breaking, the U(1) Problem and a Possible Solution to the...

  4. Bardeen is best known for his work on quantum field theory anomalies. He received the J.J. Sakurai Prize of the American Physics Society in 1996 for his work on quantum chromodynamics.

  5. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1956 was awarded jointly to William Bradford Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Houser Brattain "for their researches on semiconductors and their discovery of the transistor effect"

  6. www.nasonline.org › directory-entry › william-a-bardeen-00gap3William A. Bardeen – NAS

    Topics include quantum anomalies, renormalization of quantum field theories, perturbative quantum chromodynamics (QCD), axions, nonperturbative applications of the large Nc expansion for QCD, dynamical symmetry breaking, electroweak fixed points, and the implications of a heavy top quark.

  7. William Bardeen has played a major role in the development of perturbation theory for quantum chromodynamics. He developed with Stephen Adler the "non-renormalization theorem," which is known as the Adler-Bardeen theorem.