Research Interests of Rick Van Kooten
Experimental High Energy Particle Physics
([Always?] Under
Construction)
Home
Page
Background Information
- What is Particle Physics?
- List
of papers for Rick Van Kooten (from SLAC HEP database).
Some Recent Talks
Proton-proton Collider Physics using the ATLAS
Detector at CERN
Just starting this effort
Indiana
University ATLAS Group Page
Proton-antiproton Collider Physics using the D0
Detector at Fermilab
Indiana
University D0 Group Page
Currently one of the Physics
Coordinators of the D0 Experiment. Enjoyable, but kind of like
drinking from
a firehose of information...
From the
highest-energy
electron-positron machine in the world to the highest energy
proton-antiproton
machine...
Joining Prof.
Zieminski
on the upgrade
of
the D0 detector and physics at Run II
Joined the central
scintillating fiber tracker effort. Specifically, with Notre Dame,
building the clear
fiber waveguides to carry light down to the visible light photon
counters
below the D0 detector. Here in Bloomington we are building first the
waveguides
for the Central Preshower Detector, then the Forward
Preshower detector, then helping Notre Dame with Fiber Tracker
waveguides
if necessary. New postdoc Andrei Mayorov is contributing towards the
fiber
tracker online DAQ, cosmic ray tests, and tracker alignment and online
calibration.
Physics
interests?
Continuing those from e+e- (see below):
- b
quark physics : co-convened (Sept. 2003 - Dec. 2005) the D0
B Physics Working Group, b lifetimes (Lambda_b lifetime with grad
student
Abaz Kryemadhi), mixing, spectroscopy
Some more recent talks:
- D0
b-id Working Group (convened group until August 2002) Muon tagging,
using it for lifetime tagging certification
North
American Working Group on Linear Collider Tracking - funded for
investigating
the effect of intermediate tracker and benchmark Higgs physics
processes;
At long last,
the "Orange
Book", a source book for Linear Collider physics, preparing for
Snowmass. Contributed to Higgs and tracking chapters, was one of the
editors for Higgs chapter.
Some recent
talks
given:
- LHC/LC 2002 Workshop, Fermilab, Dec. 2002, Higgs
at the Linear Collider
- Fermilab Wine and Cheese Theory/Experimental Seminar, 8 Nov.
2002
- LCWS2002, Jeju Island, Korea, August 2002, Mini-Review
of North American Activities
- Linear
Collider Workshop, Santa Cruz, June 2002
- Linear
Collider Workshop, Chicago, Jan. 2002
- Berkeley
2000 Meeting;
- Fermilab
Users Group Meeting / SLAC Users Group Meeting (HEPAP input meetings)
- Linear
Collider Detector Group
- Status
and Plans for Snowmass 2001 Higgs Analyses
American
Linear Collider
"White Paper": The Case
for
a 500 GeV e+e- Linear Collider
US/Canada
Linear Collider Detector Simulation Group
ICFA
Statement about linear colliders
More
information about linear colliders
NLC
Physics Summary Report
Co-Convening
(with
Andreas Kronfeld, FNAL) the Higgs
Working
Group
Higgs
Discovery
and Properties Report
submitted to Snowmass Proceedings
Electron-Positron Physics at LEP
II using OPAL
Electron-Positron Physics on LEP
at CERN using the OPAL
Detector
B Physics
Properties of
b baryons
- the closest thing we have to a free quark inside of a bound hadron
(top
decays too quickly to form hadrons!)
- Lifetimes
(talk) and paper.
Was the most precise measurement in the world of the average b baryon
lifetime
for two years (edged out by ALEPH). Lifetime still surprisingly short
as
compared to theoretical predictions (see talk).
- Polarization: submitted
paper, CERN-EP/98-119, and invited talk
at ICHEP '98, Vancouver. First exclusion at better than 95% CL of zero
polarization!, i.e., b quarks initially longitudinally polarized in
production
at the Z transfer this polarization to the b baryon containing this
heavy
quark.
- Masses
- Production
rates (talk) and paper.
Phase III
upgrade of
the OPAL silicon
microstrip
vertex detector - basically closing up the phi gaps and making it
longer
in z to improve theta coverage to improve b-tagging with an eye for LEP
II physics
Cool project with undergrads Matt Shepherd and Joe Foster
Other stuff I find wildly interesting but have not yet had the time
to
do much about....
non-accelerator
neutrino experiments
medical
imaging
physics
neural
networks
non-linear
dynamics
and chaos
departures
from
"normal" gravity at sub-millimeter scales.
Last updated 26 September 1999
This page is http://hep.physics.indiana.edu/~rickv/research.html
Rick
Van Kooten , rvankoot@indiana.edu