Jump to content

Raul Jimenez Tellado

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Raul Jimenez
Jimenez in 2018
Born10 January 1967 (1967-01-10) (age 57)
NationalitySpanish
CitizenshipSpanish
Alma materUniversidad Autonoma de Madrid
University of Copenhagen
Known forStellar Ages
Expansion History of the Universe
Old galaxies
Non-Gaussianity
Scientific career
FieldsCosmology, Physics, Astrophysics, Statistics
InstitutionsUniversidad Autonoma de Madrid
University of Copenhagen
University of Edinburgh
Rutgers University
University of Pennsylvania
Institute for Advanced Study
Princeton University
University of Barcelona
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Imperial College
Doctoral advisorUffe G. Jorgensen
Bernard Pagel
Other academic advisorsJohn Peacock
Alan F. Heavens

Raul Jimenez Tellado (born 1967, Madrid, Spain), known professionally as Raul Jimenez, is a cosmologist and theoretical physicist and currently the ICREA[1] Professor of Cosmology at the University of Barcelona.[2] His research interests include the origin and evolution of the Universe, large-scale structure, dark matter, dark energy, inflation, the cosmic microwave background, statistics and Bayesian inference.

Early life, education, and career

[edit]

Jimenez was born in Madrid, Spain, in 1967 in the Salamanca District where he also grew up. He attended elementary and middle school at the Colegio Publico Ntra. Sea. de la Almudena.[3] He completed his high school education at the Instituto de Bachillerato Cervantes in the natural sciences branch, and completed his undergraduate studies at the Universidad Autonoma de Madrid specializing in theoretical physics. He obtained his Ph.D in 1995 at the Niels Bohr Institute of the University of Copenhagen.

He then moved to the Royal Observatory in Edinburgh, where he held a PPARC Advanced Fellowship. After this five-year period, he went to the U.S. where he joined the faculty of the Physics & Astronomy departments of Rutgers University and, later, the University of Pennsylvania. He joined ICREA in September 2007 as a Professor.

Astronomical research

[edit]

Jimenez is a cosmologist and works on theoretical cosmology and astrophysics.[4] He uses astronomical observations to learn about the fundamental laws of nature. His research interests are broad and range from the origin and evolution of the universe to the physics of stars and stellar systems. He is also interested in large scale structures and the theory behind them. He has made several contributions to the analysis of large datasets and the introduction of Bayesian statistics in cosmology. His most cited papers are:

J Simon, L Verde, R Jimenez "Constraints of the redshift dependence of the dark energy profile", Physical Review D 71 (12), 123001 (905 Google Scholar citations)

D Stern, R Jimenez, L Verde, M Kamionkowski, SA Stanford "Cosmic chronometers: constraining the equation of state of dark energy. I: H (z) measurements" Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics 2010 (02), 008 (739 citations)

A Heavens, B Panter, R Jimenez, J Dunlop -"The star-formation history of the Universe from the stellar populations of nearby galaxies" Nature, 2004 (555 citations)

His research has been featured in several public outlets like New Scientist,[5] Le Point,[6] The Economist,[7] and Forbes.[8]

Other work

[edit]

His book Democracias Robotizadas,[9] written with sociologist Luis Moreno Fernández has been translated to English[10] and Italian.[11] It gives a description of the current and future technologies employed in the development of machine learning and artificial intelligence, and elaborates on how our democracies can survive the progressive and inevitable robotization of our societies.

In his new book Behind Closed Doors,[12] he reflects on the role that robotization, machine learning and big data had during the pandemic and how our society needs to adjust to the new reality of massive virtualization.

Honors and awards

[edit]

Among other honors, Raul Jimenez was a Henri Poincaré Institute/CNRS distinguished visiting professor in the Fall of 2018[13] and a Radcliffe Fellow at Harvard University from 2015 to 2016.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "ICREA". www.icrea.cat.
  2. ^ "ICCUB". icc.ub.edu.
  3. ^ "Colegio Publico Ntra. sra. de la Almudena".
  4. ^ "Raul Jimenez". sites.google.com.
  5. ^ Chown, Marcus. "Invisible worlds". New Scientist.
  6. ^ Durand-Parenti, Chloé (8 December 2014). "Vie extraterrestre : plus seuls que prévu dans l'Univers ?". Le Point.
  7. ^ "Bolts from the blue" – via The Economist.
  8. ^ Siegel, Ethan. "Could Dark Energy Be Caused By Frozen Neutrinos?". Forbes.
  9. ^ "Democracias Robotizadas".
  10. ^ "Robotized Democracies".
  11. ^ "Democracie Robotizzate".
  12. ^ "Behind Closed Doors".
  13. ^ "Henri Poincaire Institute".
  14. ^ "Radcliffe Harvard".
[edit]