Ikaros Bigi

Ikaros Bigi (born 27 August 1947) is a German theoretical physicist. His research focuses on refining the Standard Model phenomenology.[1][2]

Ikaros Bigi
Born (1947-08-27) 27 August 1947
NationalityGermany
Alma materUniversity of Munich
Known forCP violation
B meson decays
AwardsMercator Visiting Professorship (2002)
Sakurai Prize (2004)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysicist
InstitutionsRockefeller University
Nagoya University
University of Notre Dame

Biography

Bigi graduated from Gymnasium Fridericianum, Erlangen, in 1967. Six years later he received a Master from the Max-Planck-Institute for Physics, University of Munich, where he stayed until 1977 to finish his PhD in Theoretical Physics. Since 1984 he is also a holder of Habilitation degree in Physics, acquired from RWTH Aachen University.

During his career, Bigi has been a research associate in many research teams in laboratories for Physics around the world. To summarize, some of them were SLAC (1973-1974), the Max Planck Institute for Physics in Munich (1975-1981), CERN (1978-1980), the Fermilab (1984). He has also been a visiting professor to Universities over the U.S. and Europe, with duties currently being performed for the University of Notre Dame, Indiana.

Bigi is an enthusiastic writer and reviewer with plenty of contributions to scientific journals; he is a member of International Committees and organisations for Physics, taking active part in seminars and conferences held worldwide.

Bigi is married and has three children.

Awards

Along with Anthony Ichiro Sanda, he was awarded the 2004 Sakurai Prize for his work on CP violation and B meson decays.[3]

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gollark: Mining isn't guessing primes, mostly it's just bruteforcing a hash with a particular number of leading zeros
gollark: They had 5000-series ones too, but not, to my knowledge, 4000, 3000, etc (recently).
gollark: The AMD 6000 series ones presumably.
gollark: The next generation is Meteor Lake or something.

References

  1. Krewald, Siegfried; Machner, Hartmut (March 2008). "Symmetries and hadron dynamics go on the MENU". CERN Courier. 48 (2): 30–31.
  2. Harrison, Paul (October 2014). "CP violation: past, present and future". CERN Courier.
  3. APS Physics, 2004 J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics Recipient
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