Brody held a PPARC (Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council) research fellowship in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics in Cambridge University, in conjunction with a Research Fellowship at Churchill College. In 1999 he returned to Imperial College as a Royal Society University Research Fellow. In 2004 Brody was invited to the Imperial Palace in Tokyo as an Outstanding Young Person to meet the Emperor of Japan.[1] Brody has been a full professor since 2011 and since 2018 he has held a Chair in Mathematics at the University of Surrey in the UK.[2]
Brody has published more than 100 papers[13][14] with his most recognisable contributions being in the complex extension of quantum mechanics known as PT-symmetric quantum mechanics,[15] and in the introduction of information-based asset pricing theory.[16] Recently, his work (with Carl M. Bender and Markus Müller) on the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture received significant attention.[17][18][19][20][21][22] While Bellissard gave arguments suggesting that the strategy proposed does not work,[23] his arguments were rebutted[24] and a subsequent paper by Brody and Bender proved formally that their original claims were correct.[25]
^Brody, Dorje C.; Meister, Bernhard K.; Parry, Matthew F. (2012). "Informational inefficiency in financial markets". Mathematics and Financial Economics. 6 (3): 249–259. doi:10.1007/s11579-012-0078-1. ISSN1862-9679. S2CID154143369.
^Brody, Dorje C.; Hughston, Lane P.; Macrina, Andrea (2022). Financial Informatics: An Information-Based Approach to Asset Pricing. World Scientific. ISBN9789811246487.
^Bellissard, Jean V. (2017). "Comment on "Hamiltonian for the Zeros of the Riemann Zeta Function"". arXiv:1704.02644 [quant-ph].
^Bender, Carl M.; Brody, Dorje C.; Müller, Markus P. (18 May 2017). "Comment on 'Comment on "Hamiltonian for the zeros of the Riemann zeta function" '". arXiv:1705.06767 [quant-ph].