Thomas Wilson
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Thomas Wilson | Physicist, Researcher

Dr. Thomas Wilson is an experienced physicist and researcher with more than five decades of achievement and accomplishments. Throughout his career, Dr. Wilson worked for NASA, training astronauts and researching principles and theories of high-energy theoretical physics. He retired from NASA in 2013, but his legacy with the organization far extends beyond his time.

Many people can point out that the olive branch is a symbol of the first human landing on the Moon. This symbol, was born from Dr. Wilson, and it has endured throughout the decades. In addition, many of his achievements include research on important scientific topics; including on grand unified field theory, relativistic quantum field theory, quantum chromodynamics, quantum probability theory, supergravity, quantum cosmology, astrophysics, deep inelastic scattering, neutrino astronomy and neutrino tomography. He holds discoveries in the classical uncertainty principle and is a patentee in the field. He has contributed designs to NASA’s proposed lunar base and has fixed a major problem with manual Saturn takeover for the Apollo program.
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Furthermore, Dr. Wilson has authored three books and contributed to numerous professional journals. Citations of Dr. Wilson's scientific publications have exceeded 3,000. He earned a BA, BS, MA and PhD from Rice University, attaining the doctorate degree in 1976. Dr. Wilson maintains affiliation with the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Nuclear Society, Physicists in Medicine, the New York Academy of Sciences and the American Physical Society.
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