F ACULTY B IOGRAPHIES & RESEARCH I NTERESTS

Similar documents
Laboratory for Nuclear Science

FYS 3510 Subatomic physics with applications in astrophysics. Nuclear and Particle Physics: An Introduction

Vita Davison E. Soper

Elementary Particle Physics Glossary. Course organiser: Dr Marcella Bona February 9, 2016

Contents. Preface to the First Edition Preface to the Second Edition

High Energy Physics. QuarkNet summer workshop June 24-28, 2013

IPMU, the University of Tokyo, Kashiwa-no-Ha Kashiwa City, Chiba , JAPAN (Work Address)

Accelerators. Acceleration mechanism always electromagnetic Start with what s available: e - or p Significant differences between accelerators of

Particle Physics A short History

The God particle at last? Astronomy Ireland, Oct 8 th, 2012

Introduction. Read: Ch 1 of M&S

Most of Modern Physics today is concerned with the extremes of matter:

Chapter 46. Particle Physics and Cosmology

Lecture PowerPoint. Chapter 32 Physics: Principles with Applications, 6 th edition Giancoli

INTRODUCTION TO NUCLEAR AND PARTICLE PHYSICS

Most of Modern Physics today is concerned with the extremes of matter:

e + e - (1) Silicon Vertex Detector

XLDB CONFERENCE WELCOME. James Williams September 11, 2012

An Introduction to Particle Physics

The God particle at last? Science Week, Nov 15 th, 2012

Fundamental Particles and Forces

Renee H. Fatemi. Contact Information. Education. Academic Positions. Professional Activities. Awarded Research Grants and Fellowships

Accelerator Based Particle Physics Experiments

Physics 424: Dr. Justin Albert (call me Justin!)

FYS3510 Subatomic Physics. Exam 2016

FYS3510 Subatomic Physics. Exam 2016

Particle Physics Outline the concepts of particle production and annihilation and apply the conservation laws to these processes.

Particle + Physics at ATLAS and the Large Hadron Coillder

Department of Physics

Introduction to Particle Accelerators & CESR-C

Unsolved Problems in Theoretical Physics V. BASHIRY CYPRUS INTRNATIONAL UNIVERSITY

Assistant Professor of Physics, Division of Astrophysics

Overview. The quest of Particle Physics research is to understand the fundamental particles of nature and their interactions.

FACULTY OF SCIENCE. High Energy Physics. WINTHROP PROFESSOR IAN MCARTHUR and ADJUNCT/PROFESSOR JACKIE DAVIDSON

Par$cles. Ma#er is made of atoms. Atoms are made of leptons and quarks. Leptons. Quarks. atom nucleus nucleon quark m m m m

Dean Karlen University of Victoria & TRIUMF. APS NW Section Meeting 2005 Victoria, Canada

Future Directions in Experimental Nuclear and Particle Physics

CURRICULUM VITAE (ABBREVIATED) SERGE RUDAZ

Theoretical particle physics

Option 212: UNIT 2 Elementary Particles

17 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA (617)

The Discovery of the Higgs Boson: one step closer to understanding the beginning of the Universe

Experimental results on nucleon structure Lecture I. National Nuclear Physics Summer School 2013

High Energy Particle Physics at the University of Tennessee

PHYSICS DEPARTMENT. 2 Chairs endowed at > $2 million. 9 Chairs endowed at > $1 million. 1 Professorship endowed at $600 K

The first Georgian Cosmic Ray Station on Mt Elbrus (5,642 m ) (Andronikashvili, Chikovani, Manjavidze)

Week 3 - Part 2 Recombination and Dark Matter. Joel Primack

Scientific Community Perspectives Physics

SCIPP Research Program

Beyond Standard Models Higgsless Models. Zahra Sheikhbahaee

DISCOVERING THE QUANTUM UNIVERSE

Finish up our overview of small and large

TALKS AT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES/WORKSHOPS

The physics of elementary particles

Teaching Assistant Shared responsibility for labs, discussion sections, exams, homework assignments, and grades for an introductory physics class.

Modern physics 1 Chapter 13

Modern Accelerators for High Energy Physics

Curriculum Vitae Markus Amadeus Luty

A brief history of accelerators, detectors and experiments: (See Chapter 14 and Appendix H in Rolnick.)

Nuclear and Particle Physics

Physics 214 Experimental Particle Physics. Lecture 1 What to expect.

Understanding the balance of matter and antimatter in the Universe

Matter, Energy, Space, Time

An Assessment of U.S.-Based Electron-Ion Collider Science

Physics 214 Experimental Particle Physics. Lecture 1 What to expect.

Kiwoon Choi (KAIST) 3 rd GCOE Symposium Feb (Tohoku Univ.)

Multiparticle Dynamics Group

New subatomic particle and the Electro-Strong and -Weak Interaction

Gravity, Strings and Branes

Activities of the Karlsruhe Center Elementary Particle and Astroparticle Physics (KCETA)

DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS

Democritus, a fifth century B.C. philosopher, is credited with being the first

The Standard Model and Beyond

Unravelling the Mysteries of Matter with the CERN Large Hadron Collider An Introduction/Overview of Particle Physics

Laboratory for Nuclear Science

PHYSICS PARTICLE. An Introductory Course of. Palash B. Pal. CRC Press. Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics. Kolkata, India. Taylor &.

The Standard Model and Beyond

Y2 Neutrino Physics (spring term 2017)

An Introduction to the Standard Model of Particle Physics

Text. References and Figures from: - Basdevant et al., Fundamentals in Nuclear Physics - Henley et al., Subatomic Physics

Collider physics. Introduction Some e + e - collider physics. Hadronic machines. R(e + e - hadrons/ e + e - µ - µ + ) Z 0 and W at LEP

If you want to learn more about us, contact us or show up here, we are glad to give you a tour of CENTRA's facilities.

Particle Physics and Astrophysics Program at SLAC. David B. MacFarlane Associate Laboratory Directory for PPA SLUO AGM on Nov 10, 2011

A Brief History of Particle Physics

Higgs boson may appear to be a technihiggs

Nuclear Physics Questions, Directions, Applications

Katsushi Arisaka University of California, Los Angeles Department of Physics and Astronomy

Yurii Maravin. Department of Physics Phone: (630) Cardwell Hall Fax: (785)

Curriculum Vitae (2015)

Experimental Particle Physics at SLAC. John Jaros Stanford Graduate Student Orientation September 17, 2015

The Gamma Factory proposal for CERN

Nuclear and Particle Physics 3: Particle Physics. Lecture 1: Introduction to Particle Physics February 5th 2007

Elementary Particles, Flavour Physics and all that...

Matter, Energy, Space, Time

Neutrino Physics. Kam-Biu Luk. Tsinghua University and University of California, Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

The Scale-Symmetric Theory as the Origin of the Standard Model

Black holes in D>4 dimensional space-times

Themis Mastoridis Curriculum Vitae

Hand of Anna Röntgen. From Life magazine,6 April 1896

CHAPTER 14 Particle Physics

Transcription:

F ACULTY B IOGRAPHIES & RESEARCH I NTERESTS Tom Abel Associate Professor Cosmology and Theoretical Astrophysics Ph.D., 2000, Ludwig Maxemillian University Munich; M.A. 1998, Univ. of Regensburg; Assistant Professor, Pennsylvania State University, 2002-2004; Associate Professor, Pennsylvania State University, 2004;Associate Professor, Stanford University and SLAC, 2004-present. Research Areas: Cosmology and theoretical astrophysics; primordial star formation, cosmological structure formation and reionization,astrophysical fluid dynamics and radiative transfer. James Daniel Bjorken Professor (Emeritus) Theoretical Physics Ph.D., 1959, Stanford University; B.S., 1956, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Associate, Assistant Professor, Stanford University, 1959-1962; Associate Professor, Professor, SLAC, 1962-1979; Theoretical Physicist, Associate Director for Physics, Fermi Lab, 1979-1989; Theoretical Physicist, SLAC, 1989-1998; Professor Emeritus, Stanford University, 1998 present. Roger Blandford Professor Theoretical Astrophysics Ph.D., 1974, Magdalene College, Cambridge; M.A.,1974, University of Cambridge; B.A., 1970, Magdalene College, Cambridge. Research Fellow, St. John s College, Cambridge, 1973-1976; Assistant Professor, California Institute of Technology, 1976-1979; Professor, California Institute of Technology, 1979-1989; Richard Chace Tolman Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, 1989-2003; Executive Officer for Astronomy, California Institute of Technology, 1992-1995; Pehong and Adele Chen Professor of Physics and Stanford University and SLAC, and Director, Kavli Institute of Astrophysics and Cosmology, 2003-present. Research Areas: Cosmology; black hole astrophysics, gravitational lensing; galaxies; cosmic rays; neutron stars; and white dwarfs. 29

Richard Blankenbecler Professor (Emeritus) Theoretical Physics Ph.D., 1958, Physics, Stanford University. SLAC, Stanford; B.A. 1954, Physics, Miami University. Associate Professor, Princeton University, 1960-1966; Professor, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1966-1969; Professor, SLAC, Stanford 1969-2003, Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 2003-present. not pictured Elliott D. Bloom Professor Experimental Particle Astrophysics Ph.D., 1967, California Institute of Technology; B.A., 1962, Pomona College. Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1967-1970; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1970-1974; Visiting Assistant Professor, Physics, California Institute of Technology, 1972-1973; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1980; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1980-present. Research Areas: experimental particle astrophysics; space satellite observations of celestial sources of x-ray and gamma-ray radiation as a probe of relativistic gravity, dark matter, and the early universe. Martin Breidenbach Professor Ph.D., 1970, Physics, MIT; B.S., 1965, Physics; Research Assistant, MIT, 1969-1970. Research Associate, MIT, 1970-1971; Junior Visiting Scientist, CERN, 1971-1972; Postdoctoral Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1972-1977; Permanent Staff, SLAC, Stanford, 1977-1989; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1989-present. Research Areas: e + e Colliding beam physics: R&D for a new detector for NLC, with a particular interest in complete detector optimization and Si-W electromagnetic calorimeters. Also interested in some particular areas of the actual collider, such as polarized e guns, e + targets, and instrumentation strategy. Neutrinoless double beta decay: R&D for an experiment with Xe 136 with the goal of measuring the effective mass of the neutrino. 30

Stanley J. Brodsky Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., 1964, University of Minnesota; B.S., 1961, Physics. Research Associate, Columbia University, 1964-1966; Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1966-1968; Permanent Staff, Theoretical Physics, SLAC, Stanford, 1968-1975; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1975-1976; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1976-present; Head Theoretical Physics Group, SLAC, 1996-2002; Visiting Professor, Natural Sciences, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University, 1982; AVCO Visiting Professor, Cornell University, 1985; Foreign Scientific Member and External Scientific Director, Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics, Heidelberg, 1989-present. Distinguished Fellow and Visiting Professor, Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility and the College of William and Mary, 2003. Research Areas: High-energy theoretical physics, especially the quark- gluon structure of hadrons and novel effects in quantum chromodynamics; fundamental problems in atomic, nuclear, and high energy physics; precision tests of quantum electrodynamics, light-front quantization; nonperturbative and perturbative methods in quantum field theory. Applications of the AdS/CFT correspondence to quantum chromodynamics. David L. Burke Professor Ph.D., 1978, Physics, University of Michigan; B.S., 1971, Physics, Purdue University. Postdoctoral Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1978-1982; Assistant Professor, Physics, SLAC, Stanford,1982-1988; Associate Professor, Physics, SLAC, Stanford, 1988-1994; Professor, Physics, SLAC 1994-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics and accelerator physics. Research and development of the physics and technologies of the next-generation electronpositron linear collider (ILC). Alexander Wu Chao Professor Ph.D., 1974, Physics, State University of New York at Stony Brook; B.S., 1970, Physics, National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan. Research Associate, SLAC, 1974-1976; Experimental Physicist, SLAC, 1976-1984; Senior Scientist, SSC, Central Design Group, 1984-1989; Senior Scientist, SSC Laboratory, 1989-1994; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1994-present. Research Areas: Accelerator physics; nonlinear beam dynamics; collective instabilities of high intensity beams; polarization effects beam-beam interaction in storage rings; advanced acceleration schemes. 31

Stanley J. Brodsky Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., 1964, University of Minnesota; B.S., 1961, Physics. Research Associate, Columbia University, 1964-1966; Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1966-1968; Permanent Staff, Theoretical Physics, SLAC, Stanford, 1968-1975; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1975-1976; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1976-present; Head Theoretical Physics Group, SLAC, 1996-2002; Visiting Professor, Natural Sciences, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University, 1982; AVCO Visiting Professor, Cornell University, 1985; Foreign Scientific Member and External Scientific Director, Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics, Heidelberg, 1989-present. Distinguished Fellow and Visiting Professor, Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility and the College of William and Mary, 2003. Research Areas: High-energy theoretical physics, especially the quark- gluon structure of hadrons and novel effects in quantum chromodynamics; fundamental problems in atomic, nuclear, and high energy physics; precision tests of quantum electrodynamics, light-front quantization; nonperturbative and perturbative methods in quantum field theory. Applications of the AdS/CFT correspondence to quantum chromodynamics. David L. Burke Professor Ph.D., 1978, Physics, University of Michigan; B.S., 1971, Physics, Purdue University. Postdoctoral Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1978-1982; Assistant Professor, Physics, SLAC, Stanford,1982-1988; Associate Professor, Physics, SLAC, Stanford, 1988-1994; Professor, Physics, SLAC 1994-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics and accelerator physics. Research and development of the physics and technologies of the next-generation electronpositron linear collider (ILC). Alexander Wu Chao Professor Ph.D., 1974, Physics, State University of New York at Stony Brook; B.S., 1970, Physics, National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan. Research Associate, SLAC, 1974-1976; Experimental Physicist, SLAC, 1976-1984; Senior Scientist, SSC, Central Design Group, 1984-1989; Senior Scientist, SSC Laboratory, 1989-1994; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1994-present. Research Areas: Accelerator physics; nonlinear beam dynamics; collective instabilities of high intensity beams; polarization effects beam-beam interaction in storage rings; advanced acceleration schemes. 31

Herbert DeStaebler Professor (Emeritus) Ph.D., 1954, MIT; B.S., 1950. Research Associate, MIT, 1954-1955. Research Associate, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, 1955-1956; Research Associate, Physics Department, Stanford, 1957-1961; Acting Assistant Professor, Physics Department, Stanford, 1959-1960; Permanent Staff, SLAC, Stanford, 1961-1972; Senior Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1972-1974; Adjunct Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1982; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1983-1995, Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 1996-present. Lance J. Dixon Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., 1986, Physics, Princeton University; M.A., 1983, Physics, California Institute of Technology, B.S., 1982, Physics and Applied Mathematics, California Institute of Technology. Postdoctoral Fellow, SLAC, Stanford, 1986-1987; Assistant Professor, Princeton University, 1987-1989; Visiting Professor, Stanford, 1988-1989; Panofsky Fellow, SLAC, Stanford, 1989-1992.; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1992-1998; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1998-present. Research Areas: Theoretical particle physics, primarily perturbative QCD and collider physics. Jonathan M. Dorfan Professor Ph.D., 1976, University of California, Irvine; B.S., 1969, Physics and Applied Mathematics, University of Cape Town, South Africa. Research Associate, University of California, 1971-1976; Postdoctoral Fellow, SLAC, Stanford, 1976-78; Research Physicist, SLAC, Stanford, 1981-1984; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1984-1989; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1989-present; Laboratory Director, SLAC, Stanford, 1999-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics and accelerator design. 32

Persis S. Drell Professor Experimental Particle and Astrophysics Ph. D. Physics, University of California Berkeley, 1983; A.B. Math/Physics, Wellesley College, 1977. Postdoctoral Research Associate, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1983-1987; Assistant Professor of Physics, Cornell University, 1988-1992; Associate Professor of Physics, Cornell University, 1993-1997; Professor of Physics, Cornell University, 1998-2002; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 2002-present. Research Areas: Particle astrophysics and studies of weak and strong interactions at e + e colliders. Sidney D. Drell Professor (Emeritus) Theoretical Physics Ph.D., 1949 University of Illinois; M.A., 1947, University of Illinois; A.B., 1946, Princeton University. Professor of Physics at Stanford 1956 1963; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1963 1998, and Deputy Director 1969-1998; Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 1998- present. Edward L. Garwin Professor Physical Electronics Ph.D., 1958, Physics, University of Chicago; M.S., 1955, Physics, Case Institute of Technology; B.S., 1954, Physics, Case Institute of Technology. Research Assistant, University of Chicago, 1957-1958; Research Associate, University of Chicago, 1958-1959; Assistant Professor, University of Illinois, 1959-1960; Senior Scientist, Clauser/General Technology Corporation, 1960-1962; Permanent Staff, SLAC, Stanford, 1962-1974; Adjunct Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1982; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1983-present. 33

JoAnne L. Hewett Associate Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., 1988, Iowa State University; B.S., 1982, Physics and Mathematics, Iowa State University. Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1988-1991; Assistant Physicist, Argonne National Laboratory, 1991-1993; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1994-2002; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 2002-present. Research Areas: Theoretical particle physics; phenomenology of electroweak interactions within and beyond the Standard Model, collider signatures and effects in rare processes. Heavy flavor physics. Signature of extra spacetime dimensions. Thomas M. Himel Professor Accelerator Physics Ph.D., 1979, Physics, Stanford; B.S., 1976, Physics, California Institute of Technology. Scientific Associate and Staff, CERN, 1980-1984; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1984-1989; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1989-1995; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1995-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics, accelerator and control systems for linear colliders; SLC controls and feedback systems, controls and commissioning of the PEP-II, B-factory accelerator; advanced accelerator R&D aimed towards a 1 TeV linear collider. John A. Jaros Professor Ph.D., 1975, Physics, University of California, Berkeley; B.S., 1968, Physics, MIT. Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1975-1979; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1979-1984; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1984-1990; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1990-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics: precision vertex detection, heavy quark and lepton lifetimes and mixing; searches for millicharged particles; physics studies, detector R&D, and design studies for the Linear Collider Detector. 34

Shamit Kachru Associate Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., 1994, Princeton University; A.B., 1990, Harvard University. Junior Fellow, Harvard Society of Fellows, 1994-1996; Research Associate, Rutgers University, 1996-1997; Assistant Professor, UC, Berkeley, 1997-1999; Associate Professor, Stanford University and SLAC, 1999-present. Research Areas: The physics of string theory and M-theory. Recent work has been at the interface between cosmology and string theory. Also interested in string compactification, supersymmetry breaking, and duality and exact results in string theory. Steven Kahn Professor Experimental Astrophysics Ph.D., 1980, University of California, Berkeley; A.B., Physics, 1975, Columbia University. Assistant Professor of Physics, Columbia University, 1982-1984; Assistant Professor of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, 1983-1987; Associate Professor of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, 1987-1990; Associate Professor of Astronomy, University of California, Berkeley, 1989-1990; Professor of Physics and Astronomy, 1990-1998, University of California, Berkeley; Professor of Physics, Columbia University, 1995-2001; I.I. Rabi Professor of Physics, Columbia University, 2001-2003; Professor, Stanford University and SLAC, and Deputy Director, Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, 2003-present. Research Area: Engaged in a diverse program of research in high energy astrophysics, including experimental, observational, and theoretical components. Research interests include work in high resolution X-ray spectroscopy, and experimental cosmology. Tsuneyoshi (Tune) Kamae Professor Experimental Particle Astrophysics Ph.D., 1968, Princeton University; M.S., 1964, University of Tokyo; B.A., 1962, University of Tokyo. Instructor, Department of Physics, University of Tokyo, 1968-1972; Visiting scientist, CERN, 1972-1973; Lecturer and Associate Professor, Department of Physics, University of Tokyo, 1974-1981; Visiting scientist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 1981-1982; Associate Professor and Professor, Department of Physics, University of Tokyo, 1983-2000; Professor, Department of Physics, Hiroshima University, 2000-2001; Staff Scientist and Professor, SLAC, Stanford 2000-present. Research Areas: Astrophysics and High Energy Physics. 35

Kaye D. Lathrop Professor (Emeritus) Ph.D., 1962, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, California Institute of Technology; M.S., 1959, Mechanical Engineering (nuclear); B.S., 1955, Engineering, United States Military Academy, West Point. Los Alamos National Laboratory, 1962-1984: Assistant Division Leader, Theoretical Division, 1973-1975; Associate Division Leader, Reactor Division, 1975-1977; Alternate Division Leader, Energy Division, 1977-1978; Division Leader, Computer Science and Services Division, 1978-1979; Associate Director for Engineering Sciences, 1979-1984. Associate Director, Technical Division, SLAC, Stanford, 1981-1994; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1984-1994, Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford 1994- present. David W.G.S. Leith Professor Ph.D., 1962, Natural Philosophy, University of Glasgow, Scotland; B.S. (Honors, First Class), 1959, Natural Philosophy. Research Fellow, University of Glasgow, 1962-1963; Staff Physicist, CERN, 1963-1966; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1966-1970; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1970- present. Research Areas: Strong interaction dynamics; light quark spectroscopy; Z 0 boson properties; QCD; B physics; CP violation; new detection devices and instrumentation. Gregory A. Loew Professor Ph.D., 1958, Electrical Engineering, Stanford; M.S., 1954, Electrical Engineering, California Institute of Technology; Licence-ès-Sciences, Faculté des Sciences, 1952, University of Paris, France. Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1958-1961; Senior Staff, SLAC, Stanford, 1961-1964; Senior Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1964-1974; Head of Accelerator Physics Division, SLAC, Stanford, 1964-1982; Adjunct Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1982; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1982-present; Deputy Director, Technical Division, SLAC, Stanford, 1980-2001; SLAC Deputy Director, SLAC, Stanford 2001-present. Research Areas: Linear accelerators and colliders; design of accelerator structures and overall linac systems; experimentation with extremely high-gradient electric fields. 36

Vera Lüth Professor D.Sc. 1974, Particle Physics, Heidelberg; M.Sc. 1969, Physics, Heidelberg. Visiting Scientist, CERN 1969-1974; Research Associate, Heidelberg, 1971-1974; Research Associate, SLAC, 1974-1984; Scientific Associate, CERN 1984-1985; Permanent Staff, SLAC, 1984-2003; Deputy to the Associate Director of Research, SSC Laboratory, 1992-1994; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 2004-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics: fundamental symmetries, weak decays of heavy flavor particles, development of silicon vertex detectors, and precision tracking. Roger H. Miller Professor (Emeritus) Ph.D., 1965, Physics, Stanford; B.A., 1953, Physics, Princeton University. Damage Control Officer, then Engineering Officer on destroyer, US Navy, 1953-1956; NSF Fellowship, 1957-1959; Research Assistant, Microwave Laboratory, Stanford, 1959-1961; Senior Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford; 1961-1974. Adjunct Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1982; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1983-1997; Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 1997-present. H. Pierre Noyes Professor (Emeritus) Theoretical Physics Ph.D., 1950, Theoretical Physics, University of California, Berkeley; B.A., 1943, Physics, Harvard College. Assistant Professor, University of Rochester, 1951-1955; Group Leader, General Research, Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, 1955-1962; Consultant, Project Orion, 1958-1960; AVCO Visiting Professor, Cornell University, 1961; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1962-1967; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1967-2002, Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 2000-present. 37

Wolfgang K. H. Panofsky Professor (Emeritus) Ph.D., 1942, California Institute of Technology; B.A., 1938, Princeton University. Physicist, Radiation Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, 1945-1946; Assistant Professor of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, 1946-1948; Associate Professor of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, 1948-1951; Professor, Physics, Stanford, 1951-1963; Director, Stanford High-Energy Physics Laboratory, Stanford, 1953-1961; Professor and Director, SLAC, Stanford, 1961-1984; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1984-1989, Professor Emeritus and Director Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 1990-present. James McEwan Paterson Professor Ph.D., 1962, Physics, University of Glasgow, Scotland; B.S., 1959, Natural Philosophy. Research Fellow, University of Glasgow, 1962-1963; Research Fellow, Harvard University, 1963-1968; Senior Research Associate, Harvard University, 1968-1972; Senior Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1972-1974; Adjunct Professor and Assistant Director of PEP and SPEAR, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1982; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1983-present. Research Areas: Accelerator R&D with particular emphasis on electron-positron linear colliders. Martin L. Perl Professor Nobel Prize in Physics 1995 Ph.D., 1955, Physics, Columbia University; B.S., 1948, Chemical Engineering, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. Chemical Engineer, General Electric Co., 1948-1950; Graduate Research Assistant in Atomic Physics, Columbia University, 1950-1955; Instructor, Assistant Professor, and Associate Professor in Physics Department, University of Michigan, 1955-1963; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1963-present. Research Areas: Experimental elementary particle physics: electron-positron annihilation physics, tau lepton physics, searches for new elementary particles and phenomena, small liquid drop technology and applications, interaction of science with government and society. 38

Michael E. Peskin Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., 1978, Physics, Cornell University; B.A., 1973, Chemistry and Physics, Harvard University. Junior Fellow, Society of Fellows, Harvard University, 1977-1980; Visiting Scientist, DPhT, Centre D'Études Nucléaires, France, 1979-1980; Visiting Assistant Professor, Physics, Cornell University, 1980-1982; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1982-1986; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1986-present. Research Areas: Theoretical high-energy physics. Models of symmetry-breaking in the electroweak interactions, including models with supersymmetry, new dimensions of space, and other properties of superstring theory. Methods for experimental tests of these models, especially at future e + e - colliders. Charles Y. Prescott Professor Ph.D., 1966, California Institute of Technology; B.A., 1961, Physics, Rice University. Research Associate, Synchrotron Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, 1966-1970; Assistant Professor, Physics Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, 1970-1971; Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1971-1974; Permanent Staff, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1980; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1980-1984; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1984-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics; parity violation in electron scattering experiments in End Station A; nucleon spin structure experiments with polarized electron beams and polarized solid targets; e + e Z 0 studies with the SLD detector using the polarized electron beams of the SLC; Linear Collider Detector studies; neutrinoless double beta decay in Xenon. Helen Quinn Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., 1967, Physics, Stanford University; B.S., 1963, Physics, Stanford University; M.S., 1964, Physics, Stanford University. Research Associate, SLAC, 1967-1968; Guest Scientist, DESY, 1968-1970; Honorary Research Fellow, Harvard University, 1971-1972; Assistant Professor, Harvard University, 1972-1976; Associate Professor, Harvard University, 1976-1977; Visiting Scientist, SLAC, 1977-1978; Research Associate, SLAC 1978-1979; Permanent Scientific Staff, 1979-2003; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 2003-present. Research Areas: Theoretical particle physics with a focus on phenomenology of the weak interactions, particularly CP violation. 39

Tor Raubenheimer Associate Professor Ph.D., 1992, Applied Physics, Stanford; B.S., 1985, Physics/Computer Science, Dartmouth College. Research Associate, SLAC, 1991-1994; Panofsky Fellow, SLAC, 1994-1997; Visiting associate scientist, CERN, 1996-1997; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1997-2001; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 2001-present. Research Areas: Accelerator physics; design issues in next generation linear colliders; participation in SLC operation; ion/beam-plasma instabilities in rings and linacs; effects during bunch length compression. John R. Rees Professor (Emeritus) Ph.D., 1956, Indiana University; B.A., 1951; M.S., 1954. Research Fellow, Harvard University, 1956-1965; Lecturer in Physics, Harvard University, 1961-1962; Instructor in Physics, Northeastern University, 1961-1969; Staff Physicist, SLAC, Stanford, 1965-1969; Senior Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1971-1974; Adjunct Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1982; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1983-1997; Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 1997 - present. Burton Richter Professor Nobel Prize in Physics, 1976 Ph.D., 1956, MIT; B.S., 1952, MIT. Research Associate, Stanford, 1956-1960; Assistant Professor, Physics Department, Stanford, 1960-1963; Associate Professor, SLAC, 1963-1967; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1967-1984; Professor and Director, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, 1984-1999; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1999-present. Research Areas: Experimental elementary particle physics; advanced accelerator systems; storage rings; linear colliders; energy. 40

Aaron J. Roodman Assistant Professor Ph.D., 1991, University of Chicago; B.S., 1985, California Institute of Technology. Research Associate, University of Chicago, 1991-1994; Research Scientist, University of Chicago, 1994-1998; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1998-present. Research Areas: Experimental elementary particle physics; Fundamental symmetries; CP violation in the B meson. Ronald D. Ruth Professor Ph.D., 1981, Physics, State University of New York; M.A., 1978, Physics, University of Iowa; B.A., 1973, Mathematics and Physics, University of Iowa. Instructor, Department of Physics, Southern Connecticut State College, 1974-1977; Staff Scientist, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, 1981-1984; Scientific Associate, CERN, 1982-1983; Staff Physicist, SLAC, Stanford, 1984-1991; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1991-1997; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1997-present. Research Areas: Accelerator and particle beam physics; nonlinear effects; collective instabilities in storage rings and linacs; high- gradient linear acceleration; next-generation linear colliders; novel x-ray sources; laser acceleration. Rafe H. Schindler Professor Ph.D., 1979, Physics, Stanford; M.A., 1975, Physics, Stanford; B.A., 1974, Physics and Applied Mathematics, University of Rochester. Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1979-1980; Research Associate, CERN, 1980-1982; Senior Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, 1982-1985; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1985-1991; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1991-1997; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1997- present. Research Areas: Research carried out at BABAR: beauty and charm physics, including production and spectroscopy with special interest in pure leptonic decays, rare baryonic decays and rare decays of charm and beauty mesons. Instrumentation, R&D, and technology interests include the muon system upgrade for BABAR. Applications of highgain Si avalanche photodiodes and inorganic scintillators (CsI, and newer crystals) for calorimetry targeted for high energy/luminosity, high radiation environments of e + e storage ring, and linear collider detectors. 41

Robert H. Siemann Professor Ph.D., 1969, Cornell University; B.S., 1964, Brown University. Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1969-1972; Associate Physicist, Brookhaven National Laboratory, 1972-1973; Assistant Professor of Physics, Cornell University, 1973-1978; Associate Professor, Physics, Cornell University, 1978-1984; Professor, Physics, Cornell University, 1984-1990; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1991-present; Professor, Applied Physics (by Courtesy), Stanford, 2000-present. Research Areas: Experimental study of advanced accelerator concepts. Eva Silverstein Associate Professor Theoretical Particle Physics Ph.D., Physics, Princeton University, 1996; A.B., Physics, Harvard University, 1992. Postdoctoral Associate, Rutgers University, 1996-1997; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1997-2001; Associate Professor, SLAC and Stanford Physics Department, Stanford, 2001-present. Research Areas: String theory, gravity, and particle physics: including moduli stabilization, supersymmetry breaking, and the microphysics of dark energy in string theory; dynamics of interacting scalar fields in cosmology and particle physics; unification of string vacua, singularity resolution, and dualities. Dong Su Associate Professor Ph.D., 1987, Physics, Imperial College, London University; B.S., 1983, Physics, Imperial College, London University. Research Associate, High Energy Physics Institute, Beijing, China, 1987-1988; Research Associate, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, 1988-1993; Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1993-1996; Assistant Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1997-2003; Associate Professor 2004-present. Research Areas: Experimental particle physics at BaBar and SLD, with emphasis on heavy flavor and electroweak physics. Experimental instrumentation interests include CCD pixel vertex detectors, tracking systems, and trigger systems. 42

Sami G. Tantawi Associate Professor Ph.D. Electrical Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, 1992; M.Sc. Electrical Engineering, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt, 1987; B.Sc. Electrical Engineering, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt, 1984. Research Staff Member, SLAC, Stanford, 1992-2002; Assistant Professor, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt, 1994-1996; Associate Professor, Cairo University, Giza, Egypt, 2000-2002; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 2002-present. Research Areas: High power rf systems and components for advanced particle accelerators, in particular high gradient accelerator for future linear colliders. Richard Taylor Professor (Emeritus) Nobel Prize in Physics, 1990 Ph.D., 1962, Stanford University; B.Sc., 1950; M.Sc., 1952, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. Boursier, Laboratoire de l'accélérateur Linéare, Orsay, France, 1958-1961; Physicist, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California, 1961-1962; Experimental Physicist, SLAC, Stanford, 1962-1968; Associate Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1968-1970; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1970-2003, Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 2003-present. Perry Wilson Professor (Emeritus) Ph.D., 1958, Physics, Stanford University; M.S., 1952, Physics, Washington State University; B.S., 1950, Physics, Washington State University. Research Associate, Stanford, 1957-1958; Staff Physicist, Linfield Research Institute, McMinnville, Oregon, 1958-1959; Research Associate, High-Energy Physics Laboratory, Stanford, 1959-1964; Associate Director of Operations, High-Energy Physics Laboratory, Stanford, 1964-1968 and Senior Research Associate, 1966-1969; Senior Research Associate, SLAC, Stanford, 1969-1974; Adjunct Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974-1982; Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1983-1997; Professor Emeritus, SLAC, Stanford, 1997 - present. 43