He did research at SLAC and was for a number of years at the Institute for Advanced Study[1] and the Henry Semat Professor at City College of New York.
[5] Dine investigated in the 1980s modifications of quantum chromodynamics with dynamical supersymmetry breaking (DSB),[5] partly with Ian Affleck and Nathan Seiberg.
[6] With Willy Fischler and Mark Srednicki, Dine published in 1981 a theory of supersymmetric technicolor, using gauge bosons and their superpartners, that provided a model of gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking.
[7] Dine with Affleck and Seiberg developed a general theory of dynamical supersymmetry breaking in four-dimensional spacetime[8] and with Ann Nelson, Yuri Shirman, and Yosef Nir developed new models of gauge-mediated dynamical supersymmetry breaking.
[10] Later Dine with Fischler also elaborated this theory and its cosmological implications (the axion is a candidate for a dark matter particle).