Sneha Girap (Editor)

Chris Quigg

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Nationality
  
United States

Role
  
Physicist

Name
  
Chris Quigg


Known for
  
Collider phenomenology

Chris Quigg blogpressprincetoneduwpcontentuploads20140

Institutions
  
Fermilab Stony Brook University

Alma mater
  
Yale University University of California, Berkeley

Books
  
Gauge Theories of the Strong, Weak, and Electromagnetic Interactions

Education
  
Yale University, University of California, Berkeley

Notable awards
  
Sakurai Prize (2011)

Doctoral advisor
  
John David Jackson

Particle physics a conversation with chris quigg


Chris Quigg (born December 15, 1944) is an American theoretical physicist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab). He graduated from Yale University in 1966 and received his Ph.D. in 1970 under the tutelage of J. D. Jackson at the University of California, Berkeley. He has been an associate professor at the Institute for Theoretical Physics, State University of New York, Stony Brook, and was head of the Theoretical Physics Department at Fermilab from 1977 to 1987.

Contents

Contributions to physics

Quigg's contributions range over many topics in particle physics. With Benjamin Lee and H. B. Thacker in 1977 he identified the uppermost theoretical mass scale for the Higgs boson. In 1984 he coauthored "Supercollider Physics" (with Estia Eichten, Kenneth Lane and Ian Hinchliffe), which has strongly influenced the quest for future discoveries at hadron colliders, such as the Fermilab Tevatron, the SSC, and the LHC at CERN. He is also author of Gauge Theories of the Strong, Weak, and Electromagnetic Interactions.

He has made many other significant contributions to the study of the spectroscopy of heavy-light mesons, signatures for the production of heavy quarks and quarkonium, and the study of ultrahigh-energy neutrino interactions. He is an international lecturer and public speaker, and has been Editor of the Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science.

Awards and honors

Quigg was a recipient of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Research Fellowship, 1974–1978, and was elected a fellow of the American Physical Society in 1983. In 2011 Quigg with Estia Eichten, Ian Hinchliffe, and Kenneth Lane won the J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics "For their work, separately and collectively, to chart a course of the exploration of TeV scale physics using multi-TeV hadron colliders"

References

Chris Quigg Wikipedia