+ Biography
Paul Davies is theoretical physicist, cosmologist, astrobiologist, author
and broadcaster. He now works as a College Professor at Arizona State University,
where he is setting up a research institute that will examine fundamental
concepts in science. Davies previously held academic appointments in the
UK, at the Universities of Cambridge, London and Newcastle upon Tyne. He
moved to Australia in 1990, initially as Professor of Mathematical Physics
at The University of Adelaide. Later he helped found the Australian Centre
for Astrobiology, based at Macquarie University, Sydney. His research has
ranged from the origin of the universe to the origin of life, and includes
the properties of black holes, the nature of time and quantum field theory.
In addition to his research, Professor Davies is known a passionate science
communicator. He gives numerous public lectures each year throughout the
world and has written twenty-seven
books, both popular and specialist works, which have been translated into
many languages. He writes regularly for newspapers, journals and magazines
in several countries.
Among Davies's better-known media productions were a series of 45 minute
BBC Radio 3 science documentaries.
Two of these became successful books and one, Desperately Seeking Superstrings,
won the Glaxo Science Writers Fellowship. In early 2000 he devised and presented
a three-part series for BBC Radio 4 on the origin of life, entitled The
Genesis Factor. His television projects include two six-part Australian
series The Big Questions and More Big Questions and a 2003 BBC documentary
about his work in astrobiology entitled The Cradle of Life.
Paul Davies has won many awards, including the 1995 Templeton
Prize for his work on the deeper implications of science; the 2001 Kelvin
Medal from the UK Institute of Physics and the 2002 Michael Faraday Prize
from the Royal Society for promoting science to the public. In April 1999
the asteroid 1992 OG was officially named (6870) Pauldavies in his honour.
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