Georgi Gary Rozenman

Georgi Gary Rozenman

C.L.E. Moore Instructor of Mathematics

Office: 2-174

Research

Hydrodynamic Quantum Analogs, Gravitational Analogs, Quantum Cryptography, Wave–Particle Systems

Bio

Georgi Gary Rozenman is a C.L.E. Moore Instructor in the Department of Mathematics at MIT, where he works at the interface of fluid dynamics, quantum physics, and applied mathematics. He received his Ph.D. in Physics from Tel Aviv University, where he studied quantum mechanical analogies in surface gravity waves and also developed optical platforms for quantum communication and free-space quantum key distribution. Before joining MIT, he held postdoctoral appointments in both quantum cryptography, bridging experimental and theoretical approaches.

His research includes hydrodynamic analogs of quantum and gravitational phenomena—such as the Aharonov–Bohm effect and rotating black holes—as well as the development of energy-efficient quantum cryptography testbeds. He has authored more than 20 peer-reviewed papers, supervised undergraduate research projects, and regularly collaborates across physics, engineering, and applied mathematics.