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Physics 202
Owlspace
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CMS Experiment
Directions to Bonner Lab

Prof. B. Paul Padley

 I am available any time my office door is open (or ajar - if I am unavailable I will shut it closed). My office is Herman Brown Hall 232A. If you would like to arrange a formal appointment time to ensure we meet, just email a request to me; padley@rice.edu (you can also try calling extension 4703 but email usually works better).  

Experimental Particle Physics

I am an experimental particle physicist. Currently I am very active helping construct a new experiment CMS at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland.  You can see what our group has been doing by clicking here, although this is somewhat technical information.  To quote Symmetry magazine:

Physics has demonstrated that the everyday phenomena we experience are governed by universal principles applying at time and distance scales far beyond normal human experience. Elementary particle physics is one avenue of scientific inquiry into these principles. What rules govern energy, matter, space, and time at the most elementary levels? How are phenomena at the smallest and largest scales of time and distance connected?

To address these questions, particle physicists seek to isolate, create, and identify elementary interactions of the most basic constituents of the universe. One approach is to create a beam of elementary particles in an accelerator and to study the behavior of those particles–for instance, when they impinge upon a piece of material or when they collide with another beam of particles. Other experiments exploit naturally occurring particles, including those created in the sun or resulting from cosmic rays striking the earth's atmosphere. Some experiments involve studying ordinary materials in large quantities to discern rare phenomena or search for as-yet-unseen phenomena. All of these experiments rely on sophisticated detectors that employ a range of advanced technologies to measure and record particle properties.

Particle physicists also use results from ground- and space-based telescopes to study the elementary particles and the forces that govern their interactions. This latter category of experiments highlights the increasing importance of the intersection of particle physics, astronomy, astrophysics, and cosmology.