In 1959, Regge discovered a mathematical property of potential scattering in the Schrödinger equation—that the scattering amplitude can be thought of as an analytic function of the angular momentum, and that the position of the poles determines power-law growth rates of the amplitude in the purely mathematical region of large values of the cosine of the scattering angle (i.e. , requiring complex angles).[3][4][5][6][7][8] This formulation is known as Regge theory.
In the early 1960s, Regge introduced Regge calculus, a simplicial formulation of general relativity. Regge calculus was the first discrete gauge theory suitable for numerical simulation, and an early relative of lattice gauge theory. In 1968 he and G. Ponzano developed a quantum version of Regge calculus in three space-time dimensions now known as the Ponzano-Regge model.[9] This was the first of a whole series of state sum models for quantum gravity known as spin foam models. In mathematics, the model also developed into the Turaev-Viro model, an example of a quantum invariant.
In the mid-1960s he was approached by Radical period furniture manufacturer Gufram, for whom he "transformed a mathematical quartic function into a volume with intentionally ergonomic characteristics" to create the design for his 1968 Detecma seat.[10]
Married to the physicist Rosanna Cester, whom he met in the USA in 1954, the couple had three children, Daniele, Marta and Anna.
He died at the San Luigi hospital in Orbassano on 23 October 2014 at the age of 83 due to complications from pneumonia.[11] The civil funeral rite took place in the Farewell Hall of the Monumental Cemetery of Turin, where the body was cremated.[12]
Along with Piero Angela, in 1990 he co-founded the CICAP, covering the role of scientific senior consultant in place of Edoardo Amaldi.
He is considered to be the most influential Italian physicist of the 20th century, after Enrico Fermi.[14]
Thought
He had shared the hypothesis (without affirming it) that "the laws of nature that we discover, or believe we discover, are actually an 'emergent property' of the Universe, that is, they do not exist from the beginning as objective rules that are progressively revealed by us, but instead derive from a self-organizing Chaos."[15]
In 1989, Regge was elected to the European Parliament as a candidate of the Italian Communist Party and served until 1994. Regge served as president of the Turin section of the Association for Research in Handicap Prevention (AIRH).
He was awarded the Dirac Medal in 1996,[18] the Marcel Grossmann Award in 1997,[19] and the Pomeranchuk Prize in 2001.[20] The asteroid 3778 Regge has been named after him.
Regge theory, a theory of strong interaction phenomenology at high energies, and Regge calculus are named after him.
Selected works
Lettera ai giovani sulla scienza, Rizzoli, 2004
Spazio, tempo e universo. Passato, presente e futuro della teoria della relatività, with Giulio Peruzzi, UTET Libreria, 2003
L'universo senza fine. Breve storia del Tutto: passato e futuro del cosmo, Milan, Mondadori, 1999
Non abbiate paura. Racconti di fantascienza, La Stampa, 1999
Infinito, Mondadori, 1996
Gli eredi di Prometeo. L'energia nel futuro, La Stampa, 1993
^G. Ponzano; T. Regge (1968). "Semiclassical limit of Racah coefficients". In Bloch, F. (ed.). Spectroscopic and group theoretical methods in physics. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publ. Co. pp. 1–58.
Leonardo Castellani, Anna Ceresole, Riccardo D'Auria, Pietro Frè (Edited by), Tullio Regge: An Eclectic Genius. From Quantum Gravity to Computer Play, World Scientific, Singapore, 2020.