After receiving his degree, he began to look for a position abroad, and in 1938 was granted a scholarship from the Parnas Foundation, which enabled him to go work in the United States. He arrived in New York City in November 1938.[3]
From 1939 to 1961, Kac taught at Cornell University, an Ivy League university in Ithaca, New York, where he was first an instructor. In 1943, he was appointed an assistant professor, and he became a full professor in 1947.[4]
In 1956, he introduced a simplified mathematical model known as the Kac ring, which features the emergence of macroscopic irreversibility from completely time-symmetricmicroscopic laws. Using the model as an analogy to molecular motion, he provided an explanation for Loschmidt's paradox.[8]
Kac was the co-chair of the Committee of Concerned Scientists.[10] He co-authored a letter, which publicized the case of the scientist Vladimir Samuilovich Kislik[11] and a letter which publicized the case of the applied mathematician Yosif Begun.[12]
Mark Kac, Statistical Independence in Probability, Analysis and Number Theory, Carus Mathematical Monographs, Mathematical Association of America, 1959.[19]
Mark Kac, Probability and related topics in the physical sciences. 1959 (with contributions by Uhlenbeck on the Boltzmann equation, Hibbs on quantum mechanics, and van der Pol on finite difference analogues of the wave and potential equations, Boulder Seminar 1957).[20]
Mark Kac, Enigmas of Chance: An Autobiography, Harper and Row, New York, 1985. Sloan Foundation Series. Published posthumously with a memoriam note by Gian-Carlo Rota.[21]ISBN0-06-015433-0
References
^Obituary in Rochester Democrat & Chronicle, 11 November 1984
^Thompson, Colin J (1986). "The contributions of Mark Kac to mathematical physics". The Annals of Probability. 14 (4): 1129–1138. doi:10.1214/aop/1176992357.