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David Goldberg, PhD

David Goldberg, PhD

Professor
Department Head, Physics
Department of Physics
Office: Disque Hall 815
goldberg@drexel.edu
Phone: 215.895.2715

Additional Sites: Astrophysics Group

Education:

  • PhD, Astrophysics, Princeton University, 2000
  • MA, Astrophysics, Princeton University, 1998
  • BA, Astronomy and Physics, Boston University, 1996

Curriculum Vitae:

Download (PDF)

Research Interests:

  • Theoretical and computational cosmology
  • Extragalactic astrophysics
  • Gravitational lensing
  • Popular science writing

Bio:

I am Prof. Dave Goldberg, head of Drexel's Department of Physics.  I am a mostly theoretical astrophysicist who focuses on large scale structure, clusters of galaxies, and gravitational lensing, and am currently funded by the good folks at the National Science Foundation.  I am also very interested in the public understanding of science, and am the author of 4 books.  If you have questions about my research or about the department, please don't hesitate to get in touch. 

2024-2025 Teaching:

  • Winter - PHYS 102 Fundamentals of Physics II
  • Spring - PHYS 433/631 General Relativity

Selected Publications:

Scientific Articles with Students

  • Arena, E. J., Goldberg, D. M., & Bacon, D. J. (2022). Cosmic Flexion. Physical Review D, 106(12), 123521.
  • Fabritius, J. M., & Goldberg, D. M. (2022). A new estimate of galaxy mass-to-light ratios from flexion lensing statistics. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 515(1), 619–635.
  • Wraga, J., & Goldberg, D. M. (2022). Bayes’ theorem, inflation, and the ekpyrotic universe. Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, 2022(4), 006.

Textbooks

  • Goldberg, D. (2023). A relatively painless guide to special relativity. University of Chicago Press.
  • Goldberg, D. (2017). The Standard Model in a nutshell. Princeton University Press.

Some other fun things

  • Gott, J. R., III, Goldberg, D. M., & Vanderbei, R. J. (2021). Flat maps that improve on the Winkel tripel. Cartography and Geographic Information Science, 48(4), 335–348.
  • Goldberg, D. (2015, April 25). The greatest physics theorem you’ve never heard of. New Scientist.
  • Goldberg, D. (2016, October 12). A brief history of time travel [Review of the book Time travel: A history, by J. Gleick]. Nature Physics, 12(10), 910–911.