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'''David John Candlin''' (1928-?) was a [[United Kingdom|British]] born [[physicist]]. He is known for developing the path integral formulation of the [[Fermion|Fermionic field]], inventing [[Berezin integral|Grassmann integration]] for this purpose.<ref>{{cite journal|journal= Nuovo Cimento | author= D.J. Candlin | volume =4 | title = On Sums over Trajectories for Systems With Fermi Statistics|year=1956|pages=231|doi= 10.1007/BF02745446}}</ref> Candlin was born in the town of Mitchum, in [[Surrey]], [[England]]. He received his PhD in 1955, and wrote his influential paper on Grassmann integration shortly thereafter. He was later appointed a lecturer at [[Edinburgh University]].<ref>A Community of Scholars: The Institute for Advanced Study, Faculty and Members 1930-1980</ref>
'''David John Candlin''' (1928-?) was a [[United Kingdom|British]] born [[physicist]]. He is known for developing the path integral formulation of the [[Fermion|Fermionic field]], inventing [[Berezin integral|Grassmann integration]] for this purpose.<ref>{{cite journal|journal= Nuovo Cimento | author= D.J. Candlin | volume =4 | title = On Sums over Trajectories for Systems With Fermi Statistics|year=1956|pages=231|doi= 10.1007/BF02745446}}</ref> Candlin was born in the town of Mitchum, in [[Surrey]], [[England]]. He received his PhD in 1955, and wrote his influential paper on Grassmann integration shortly thereafter. He was later appointed a lecturer at the [[University of Edinburgh]].<ref>A Community of Scholars: The Institute for Advanced Study, Faculty and Members 1930-1980</ref>


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 21:08, 2 September 2015

David John Candlin (1928-?) was a British born physicist. He is known for developing the path integral formulation of the Fermionic field, inventing Grassmann integration for this purpose.[1] Candlin was born in the town of Mitchum, in Surrey, England. He received his PhD in 1955, and wrote his influential paper on Grassmann integration shortly thereafter. He was later appointed a lecturer at the University of Edinburgh.[2]

References

  1. ^ D.J. Candlin (1956). "On Sums over Trajectories for Systems With Fermi Statistics". Nuovo Cimento. 4: 231. doi:10.1007/BF02745446.
  2. ^ A Community of Scholars: The Institute for Advanced Study, Faculty and Members 1930-1980

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