Professor of Physics and Astronomy; PhD, Columbia University

After receiving his Undergraduate degree from MIT, he went to Columbia University 
where he worked with Leon Lederman. For his Ph.D. research he moved to CERN, Geneva, Switzerland in 1971 to work at the world’s first hadron collider. Receiving his Ph.D. in 1974, he stayed at CERN until moving to Johns Hopkins in 1979. While on the Hopkins Faculty, he worked on various Physics experiments, including two at electron-positron colliders, two neutrino oscillation experiments and a proton-antiproton collider.  He is now a Research Professor at Hopkins and still involved in the world’s largest hadron collider at CERN.

Current Interests: Colliders, Neutrinos, Distributed Computing

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