Savdeep S. Sethi
Welcome to my webpage. I am an associate professor of physics
in the Enrico
Fermi Institute at
the University of Chicago.
This
is me.
My area of research is superstring
theory, and you can
usually find me in the
particle theory group.
Publications
My papers can be found on the e-print
archive or from SPIRES.
My curriculum vitae can be found here.
Teaching
Personal Stuff
This was the summer I didn't want to travel much but I still
had to attend Strings 2006 in Beijing. A record
of this trip can be found here.
After Strings came Aspen, 2006 and then my first trip to Copenhagen to participate in the
Niels Bohr Summer Institute.
No real pictures from Strings 2005 in Toronto. Here is me soaked at
Niagara Falls on one of the hottest
days I've ever experienced.
Pictures from Aspen,
2004 where we celebrated the discovery of anomaly
cancellation by Green
and Schwarz.
Some memories from Strings
2004 in Paris are recorded here.
Pictures from Aspen, 2003,
while my first visit to Japan for Strings
2003 is documented here.
Some pics of our dog, Rebel.
Some of my friends from Princeton visited Chicago
around the
4th of July 2002. We had fun exploring
the city. Check out some pics here.
A visit to the Aspen
Center for Physics provides a nice
opportunity to do some physics (and some hiking).
Here are some pictures
from a 2002 hike up Mount
Massive. Some
older pics from 2001 can be found here.
My attempt to explain string theory to
the public on npr
(I
shudder when I listen to this).
More to come...
Contact Information:
Enrico
Fermi Institute, Office 270
University of Chicago
5640
S. Ellis Ave.
Chicago, IL 60637
Office: 773-834-4434
Fax:
773-834-2222
sethi at theory.uchicago.edu
If I
am not around, you can leave urgent items for me with
the
particle
theory group
secretary in office 268 next door.
Acknowledgement
This material is based upon work supported by the
National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0094328.
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or
recommendations expressed in this material are those of the
author and do not necessarily reflect the
views of the National Science Foundation.