Michel Gaudin (2 December 1931 – 4 August 2023) was a French physicist, known for the Gaudin model, in which a central spin is coupled to many surrounding spins.
[2] After graduating with the degree of ingénieur des ponts et chaussées (civil engineer), Gaudin joined in 1956 the CEA in Saclay to work on neutron experiments.
Two years later, he joined Claude Bloch's theorists' working group, to which he belonged for the rest of his career.
[3] In 1967 he received from the University of Paris-Sud in Orsay his doctoral degree in physics with thesis Étude d'un modèle à une dimension pour un système de fermions en interaction.
[4] Gaudin received the Fondation Saintour Prize, awarded every two years since 1889 by the Collège de France.