Sheldon Glashow (born December 5, 1932, New York, New York, U.S.) is an American theoretical physicist who, with Steven Weinberg and Abdus Salam, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1979 for their complementary efforts in formulating the electroweak theory, which explains the unity of electromagnetism and the weak force.
Glashow was the son of Jewish immigrants from Russia. He and Weinberg were members of the same classes at the Bronx High School of Science, New York City (1950), and Cornell University (1954). Glashow received a Ph.D. in physics from Harvard University in 1958. He joined the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley in 1962 but four years later returned to Harvard as a professor of physics, Eugene Higgins Professor of Physics from 1979 onward. He remained at Harvard until 2000, when he retired as professor emeritus. That year he became Arthur G.B. Metcalf Professor of Mathematics and Science at Boston University.
In the 1960s Weinberg and Salam had each independently devised a theory by which the weak nuclear force and the electromagnetic force could be conceived as manifestations of a single unified force called the electroweak force. Their theory could be applied only to leptons, however, a class of particles that includes electrons and neutrinos. Glashow found a way to extend their theory to other classes of elementary particles, notably baryons (e.g., protons and neutrons) and mesons. In doing so, Glashow had to invent a new property for quarks, which are the fundamental particles that constitute baryons and mesons. This new property, which Glashow called “charm,” provided a valuable extension of the theory of quarks.