Husband and father of three. Professor of Physics. Science interests: pursuit of new knowledge, promoting colleagues, diversity and inclusion. Soccer, Funk etc
The SA Government welcomes groundwater scientist and respected research leader Professor Craig T. Simmons as the new Chief Scientist for South Australia.
The Chief Scientist provides independent advice on STEM, research and innovation.
Learn more: https://t.co/tfiWm6IIpu
Bolton Wanderers are deeply saddened to confirm that the supporter taken ill at yesterday afternoon’s home fixture against Cheltenham Town has passed away.
Rest in peace, Iain 🤍
Hi all, we have job openings in Adelaide for postdocs working on ATLAS on other experimental R&D. If you want to join a great team, work with some amazing students, and have a great impact in fundamental physics this position is for you: https://t.co/YlxqctgkPH
We have up to *three* PhD scholarships opening up in Sydney! If you are a master's student who wants to come to Australia to work on dark matter, please check out the ad here https://t.co/20arvvBHt8. We are planning to take on students working on both experiment and theory!
I can not recommend enough the @CERN Summer Student program to those interested in particle physics. Here 12 stories about @ATLASexperiment summer students, including Titanilla Braun with who @DiliaMP and I had the pleasure to work with! https://t.co/Oojz7Ktovm
Great to see this result come out. B->Knunu was the topic of my PhD thesis and I've supervised several students on it since then, let's hope there are more exciting results in the near future.
𝗕𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗸𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗻𝗲𝘄𝘀: Belle II reports the first evidence for the rare "missing energy" decay B → K νν̅ at the #EPSHEP2023 conference taking place in Hamburg, Germany this week. The #Belle2 result is about 3 standard deviations larger than the Standard Model expectation.
Considering a future in academia and science/engineering? There are excellent opportunities opening up in the near future in Australia. Consider joining @UofA_SET https://t.co/V0ipjwTNsy
The ATLAS Experiment at @CERN measures #Higgsboson mass with unprecedented precision!
The new result is the most precise determination of the Higgs-boson mass yet – achieving a remarkable accuracy of 0.09%. Learn more in our new briefing: https://t.co/IR3yS34EiY