
EDWARD SHURYAK
Distinguished Professor
 Physics and Astronomy
edward.shuryak@stonybrook.edu | (631)-632-8127, Physics C-139 
Research Group Website
Biography 
Edward Shuryak was born in 1948 in Odessa, now Ukraine. Successfully participating
                        in Siberian Mathematic Olympiad, he entered a special school and then Novosibirsk
                        State University, graduated in 1970, and worked as researcher in Budker Institute
                        of Nuclear Physics, where he got his Ph.D. in 1974. He started teaching in Novosibirsk
                        State University in the same year, and in 1982 was promoted to Full Professor. Moving
                        to Stony Brook University, he was promoted to SUNY Distinguished Professor rank in
                        2004. From 1993 to 2020 he was Director of Nuclear Theory Center.
Research Statement
Two main directions of his research are both related to Quantum Chromodynamics, the
                        fundamental theory of strong interactions in particle/Nuclear physics. In mid-1970's
                        he was involved in studies of QCD at finite temperatures, suggesting now standard
                        term "Quark-Gluon Plasma" for the QCD phase. Eventually transition to it has been
                        observed and studied at colliders RHIC (Brookhaven) and LHC (CERN).
Another direction is related with the so called "instantons", describing tunneling between topologically distinct gauge fields. They are to large extent responsible for the so called constituent quark mass, as well as the mass of nucleons and ourselves.
He wrote about 400 research papers, with got near 40000 citations. One of them has 2000+ citations, five 1000+.
Books
(*) "Quark-gluon plasma, heavy ion collisions and hadrons" , World scientific 2024.
(*) "Nonperturbative Topological Phenomena in QCD and related theories", 2021 Shpringer.
(*) "Manybody theory in a nutshell", textbook, Princeton University Press, 2018
(*) "The QCD vacuum, hadrons and superdense matter" World scientific, (exists in two versions, of 1986 and 2005).
Awards
(*) 2003 Awarded by "Dirac medal and lecture", by the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
(*) 2005 A. von Humboldt prize, by Germany.
(*) 2018 HERMAN FESHBACH Prize in Theoretical Nucclear Physics, by American Physics Society

