Martin B. Einhorn (14 August 1942) is an American theoretical physicist.
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).
[3][4] He was a visiting professor at NORDITA, SLAC, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Centre de physique des particules de Marseille [fr] (CPPM), and Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Beersheva.
[5] 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.