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Sussex researcher, Josh McFayden, whose work is "in search of a new force of nature” wins prestigious prize
By: Anna Ford
Last updated: Wednesday, 5 May 2021
Dr Josh McFayden
Dr Josh McFayden, a physics researcher at the University of Sussex, is the sole 2021 winner of the High Energy Particle Physics Group Prize from the Institute of Physics.
Josh is a Royal Society University Research Fellow working within the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences at the University of Sussex. He was awarded the prize for his contributions to electroweak physics at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva.
Dr Kate Shaw, from the school of Mathematical and Physical Sciences at the University of Sussex physics department, who also works with the ATLAS experiment at CERN, said:
"Josh’s work on the Large Hadron Collider has been outstanding, especially with regard to ‘lepton flavour universality’ in which we are arguably in the search of a new force of nature.
"He is also helping to guide the future of the field in helping to organise a group of early career researchers providing input to the strategy for particle physics in Europe for the next decade.”
Josh McFayden, who works between the University of Sussex and the ATLAS experiment at CERN, said:
"It's an honour to receive this prize. I feel incredibly privileged to have been able to work on Large Hadron Collider physics since the first collisions back in 2009. In my recent work on lepton flavour universality and measurements of the Higgs Boson within the ATLAS detector, the goal is to understand the universe at a fundamental level. I’m tremendously excited about what the future holds for my research at Sussex, especially as 95% of the data that will be collected from the Large Hadron Collider is still to be explored.”
Josh’s research also included developing a better understanding of the origin of mass. He did all of this work on the ATLAS experiment at CERN, which is the experiment within the Large Hadron Collider on which University of Sussex scientists wok.
This prize is awarded annually to an early career researcher for outstanding contributions to particle physics research. The prize is £500.
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