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Adams, Todd
Askew, Andrew
Berg, Bernd
Blessing, Susan
Boebinger, Gregory
Bonesteel, Nicholas
Brooks, James
Cao, Jianming
Capstick, Simon
Chiorescu, Irinel
Cottle, Paul
Crede, Volker
Dobrosavljevic, Vladimir
Duke, Dennis
Eugenio, Paul
Fenley, Marcia
Gerardy, Christopher
Gorkov, Lev
Hill, Stephen
Hoeflich, Peter
Kemper, Kirby
Lind, David
Manousakis, Efstratios
Ng, Hon-Kie
Okui, Takemichi
Owens, Joseph
Piekarewicz, Jorge
Prosper, Harrison
Reina, Laura
Rikvold, Per Arne
Riley, Mark
Roberts, Winston
Rogachev, Grigory
Schlottmann, Pedro
Shaheen, Shahid
Tabor, Samuel
Vafek, Oskar
Van Winkle, David
Volya, Alexander
von Molnár, Stephan
Wahl, Horst
Warusawithana, Maitri
Wiedenhover, Ingo
Xiong, Peng
Yang, Kun
Zhou, Huan-Xiang

 

 

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Dr. Susan Blessing

Professor, Ph.D., Indiana University, 1989

     
 


Dr. Blessing received her Ph.D. degree in experimental elementary particle physics from Indiana University in 1989. After postdoctoral work at North Western University, she joined the FSU faculty in 1994. Dr. Blessing's current research interests include the search for new phenomena in proton-antiproton collisions. Her research is carried out at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory near Chicago, IL. She is a member of the team of experimentalist who performed one of the two experiments leading to the discovery of top quark in Spring 1995.

Dr. Blessing is a member of the D0 Collaboration at Fermilab and is interested in electroweak physics and the search for New Phenomena. She is presently involved in a measurement of the W boson production asymmetry in the muon channel. In the past, she has searched for the supersymmetric partner of the top quark and first generation leptoquarks, and, while working on another experiment, for glueballs.

D0 is a proton--anti-proton collider experiment which recently underwent a significant upgrade. The FSU Experimental High Energy Physics group was responsible for various parts of the upgrade: the silicon tracker trigger, graphics, muon reconstruction software, as well as other tasks. The group is presently responsible for calorimeter operations, and are involved a new upgrade of the Level 1 calorimeter trigger and in the new Layer 0 silicon detector which will surround a new (smaller) beam pipe.

During the first run of the experiment, physicists from FSU were involved in the search for new phenomena, the search for (and discovery of!) the top quark, and studies of quantum chromodynamics. They are continuing to work in the areas of new phenomena, the top quark (including observation of top quark pairs in the tau decay channel and the search for single top quark production), and quantum chromodynamics, and also have people working on electroweak and b physics.

 
Susan Blessing
 
contact 508 KEN
phone (850) 644-1032
email
web Visit Susan Blessing personal web site
 
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