In 1989, Joanne Cohn, a physicist then at the Institute for Advanced Study, began distributing TeX files of string theory papers via email. By August of 1991, the email list had grown to 180 physicists—an unwieldy number for Cohn to individually respond to requests for papers. As Cohn recounts, a young physicist then at Los Alamos National Laboratory offered to automate the list, and arXiv was born. “Day one, something happened, day two, something happened. Day three, Ed Witten posted a paper,” said Cornell University physicist Paul Ginsparg, founder of arXiv.org. “That was when the entire community joined.”
Published in The Institute Letter Fall 2019