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Dr. Frank E Taylor
Senior Research Scientist
Primary DLC
Department of Physics
MIT Room:
26-539
(617) 253-7249
fet@mit.edu
Areas of Interest and Expertise
Particle Physics: High Energy Physics
Studies of Standard Model (Babar at SLAC and Atlas at CERN)
Research Summary
Since 1994, Dr. Taylor has been working toward the highest energy frontier where he is a collaborator on the ATLAS Detector at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. The unprecedented energy and luminosity of the colliding beams at the LHC will open a window on several of the most fundamental questions of high energy physics. Some of the theoretical possibilities that will be addressed at the LHC focus on the origin of electroweak symmetry breaking, the existence of super-symmetry and the possibility of unifying gravity with other forces through large extra dimensions.
Many of the signatures of ‘new physics’ involve the detection and measurement of leptons, such as muons. Dr. Taylor has chosen a path to the LHC research frontier by collaborating on the design and construction of the ATLAS muon system. The system is based on a toroidal magnetic field and has an outstanding stand-alone performance. Dr. Taylor is the Project Leader of the US ATLAS Muon effort.
Dr. Taylor's research interests have for a long time been in precision tests of the electro-weak sector of the standard model, focusing on the experimental exploration of the nature of electro-weak symmetry breaking and physics beyond the standard model. His involvement in the ATLAS collaboration at the LHC is a continuation of that interest. Dr. Taylor has been a collaborator on the SLD Experiment at the linear collider at SLAC nearly since its inception. Before moving to SLAC, Dr. Taylor conducted a series of neutrino experiments on the weak neutral current at FNAL using a fine-grained calorimeter.
Recent Work
Related Faculty
Dr. Jagadeesh Moodera
Senior Research Scientist
Prof. Wolfgang Ketterle
John D MacArthur Professor of Physics
Dr. Peter Dourmashkin
Senior Lecturer