Katarzyna (Kasia) Anna Rejzner (born 1985) is a Polish mathematical physicist specializing in algebraic quantum field theory and the theory of renormalization,[1][2] including the Batalin–Vilkovisky formalism. She works as a professor in mathematics at the University of York.[3]

Alexander Schenkel, Marco Benini, Kasia Rejzner, and Christoph Schweigert [de] at Oberwolfach for the 2016 mini-workshop New Interactions between Homotopical Algebra and Quantum Field Theory

Education and career

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Rejzner was born in 1985 in Kraków,[4] the daughter of two architects.[5] She earned a master's degree in physics in 2009 from Jagiellonian University, and completed her Ph.D. in 2011 at the University of Hamburg under the supervision of Klaus Fredenhagen, with a dissertation on the Batalin–Vilkovisky formalism.[6] After postdoctoral studies at the University of Rome Tor Vergata she joined the University of York in 2013, and was promoted to senior lecturer there in 2017.[3] In 2016 and 2017, she visited the Perimeter Institute as an Emmy Noether Visiting Fellow.[5] She was promoted to the position of full professor in Mathematics, University of York in 2024.[7] During the term 2024-2026, Rejzner serves as the President of the International Association of Mathematical Physics (IAMP), being the first female in this position since the foundation of the IAMP. [8]

Book

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Rejzner is the author of the book Perturbative Algebraic Quantum Field Theory: An Introduction for Mathematicians (Mathematical Physics Studies, Springer, 2016).[9]

References

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  1. ^ "Kasia Rejzner", Women in Mathematics throughout Europe: A Gallery of Portraits, retrieved 2019-08-20
  2. ^ Hartnett, Kevin (10 June 2021), "The mystery at the heart of physics that only math can solve", Quanta Magazine
  3. ^ a b Curriculum vitae (PDF), 18 March 2021, retrieved 2021-04-17
  4. ^ Birth data from German National Library catalog, retrieved 2022-06-26
  5. ^ a b Bonoguore, Tenille (16 August 2017), People of PI: Math maven Kasia Rejzner
  6. ^ Kasia Rejzner at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  7. ^ Dept. of Mathematics staff members, retrieved 2024-10-01
  8. ^ About the IAMP, retrieved 2024-10-01
  9. ^ Reviews of Perturbative Algebraic Quantum Field Theory:
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