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Physics Department
University of Virginia
Weekly Schedule
PHYS1429 Web Page
My Dept. Web Page
Publications
My cv
Directions to lab
Useful Links
E.F. Dukes, Jr. Memoirs
"Quality is not an act. It is a habit." Aristotle

"Science is built up with facts, as a house is with stones. But a collections of facts is no more science than a heap of stones is a house." Poincare

Work address:
University of Virginia
Department of Physics
382 McCormick Road
PO Box 400714
Charlottesville, VA 22904-4714
434-982-5364
434-982-5375 (fax)
Email: craigdukes at virginia.edu
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Research Links
Antimatter Asymmetry Group
HEP Group Web Page
NOvA
Mu2e
HyperCP
Some of My Recent Talks
Beyond E=mc2: Using Rare Particle Decays to Probe the Energy Frontier
Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory Seminar, February. 2011
Beyond E=mc2: Using Rare Particle Decays to Probe the Energy Frontier
Argonne National Laboratory Seminar, May. 2010
Accelerator Neutrino Physics at Fermilab
University of Illinois Seminar, Dec. 2009
Charged Lepton Flavor Violation in Muon and Tau Decays
Flavor Physics and CP Violation 2009, May, 2009
Beyond E=mc2: Using Rare Particle Decays to Probe the Energy Frontier
AAAS talk (expanded version), Feb. 2009
Accelerator Neutrino Physics at Fermilab
SESAPS talk, Oct. 2008
A High-Sensitivity Search for Charged Lepton Flavor Violation at Fermilab
University of Minnesota Seminar, May. 2008
The Search for New Physics in Hyperon Decays
Carnegie-Mellon Seminar, Mar. 2007
What's the Matter with Antimatter?
Society of Physics Students talk, Dec. 2006
The Search for CP Violation in Hyperon Decays
BEACH06 talk, July. 2006

I am a professor of physics at the University of Virginia, where I have been since 1989, and where I do research in experimental elementary particles physics. I have worked at many of the major accelerator laboratories in the world, and held visiting positions at: Brookhaven National Laboratory, CERN Lab in Geneva, Switzerland, the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Chicago, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC), in Dallas.

My current research concerns experimental investigations into symmetries of nature, in particular, elucidating the source of the slight asymmetry between matter and antimatter, or CP violation. This tiny asymmetry is thought to be responsible for the nearly absolute asymmetry between matter and antimatter in the universe, indeed why there is any matter at all in the universe. Although matter and antimatter asymmetries have been seen in the lab, the asymmetries seen to date are too small to explain absence of antimatter in the universe. Hence, one of the goals of my group's research is to search for new sources. In an innovative Fermilab experiment, HyperCP, which accumulated the largest data sample ever taken, novel sources of CP violation were searched for and not found in hyperon decays. HyperCP has found intriguing evidence for a new particle in the rarest decay of a baryon yet observed. I serve as cospokesperson of HyperCP.

I am involved in a in two new Fermilab experiments, the NOvA experiment, which, among other things, will search for matter-antimatter asymmetries in neutrinos. The fifteen-thousand ton NOvA detector, one the largest ever built, will be sited in woods of northern Minnesota. NOvA will be the flagship experiment of the US domestic particle physics program in the coming decade, and one of the flagship neutrino experiments in the world. My research group is responsible for the NOvA Detector Controls and Monitoring System and the Power Distribution System.

I have also started work on a new experiment, Mu2e, which will search for lepton flavor violation in the decay of the muon, with a sensitivity of four orders of magnitude beyond present limits. Although the neutral leptons, neutrinos, have been found to change into one another (neutrino oscillations) there is no evidence that the charged leptons (electrons, muons, and taus). Mu2e will probe mass scales unattainable at any present or planned accelerator. I serve as head of the Institutional Board for Mu2e.

I'm happy to talk about my research, or anything else, with you.



Send mail to me at craigdukes at virginia.edu .