Einhorn received in 1965 his B.S. with honors from Caltech and in 1968 his Ph.D. from Princeton University under Marvin Leonard Goldberger.[2] After postdoctoral positions at Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) and at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL), he became a staff physicist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab). In 1976, he joined the faculty of the physics department of the University of Michigan where he was eventually promoted to full professor[1] and retired as professor emeritus in 2004.[3][4]
His research publications span topics in the parton model, perturbative and nonperturbative QCD, cosmology, Higgs physics, supersymmetric grand unification, mass singularities and their consequences, and extended technicolor models. His primary interest is in physics beyond the Standard Model.[5]
Einhorn, Martin B (1993). "Confinement, form factors, and deep-inelastic scattering in two-dimensional quantum chromodynamics". In: The Large N Expansion in Quantum Field Theory and Statistical Physics: From Spin-Systems to 2-Dimensional Gravity. pp. 125–145. doi:10.1142/9789814365802_0010. ISBN978-981-02-0455-6.