Soo-Bong Kim: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 06:41, 22 December 2011
Soo-Bong Kim | |
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Born | 1960 (age 63–64) |
Nationality | Korean |
Alma mater | Seoul National University Univ. of Pennsylvania |
Known for | Discovery of neutrino oscillations and top quark |
Awards | 1st SNU Academic Research Excellence Prize(2006) Asahi Prize(1999) Bruno Rossi Prize(1989) Asahi Prize(1988) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Experimental Particle Physics |
Institutions | Seoul National University |
Doctoral advisor | Alfred K. Mann |
Education
Soo-Bong Kim was born and grew up in Busan, Korea. He attended Dongrae High School, graduating in the class of 1979. Kim then graduated in 1983 and obtained his MS degree from Seoul National University. He received his PhD from University of Pennsylvania in 1989. Kim's PhD thesis was supervised by Alfred K. Mann and resulted in real-time and directional measurement of solar neutrinos in the Kamiokande-II detector and search for short-time variation.
Work
Dr. Kim was a postdoctoral fellow and a research investigator at the University of Michigan before moving to Boston University in 1996. He took up his current position at Seoul National University in 1998. Dr. Kim jointly led the efforts of discovering the top quark in 1994 and measuring its mass in 1995 using the Fermilab hadron collider of Tevatron as a member of CDF collaboration.[1] The top quark was the heaviest fundamental fermion yet to be observed before the experiment. The observation and mass measurement of the particle opened a new field of "top quark physics".
Dr. Kim received his Ph.D. degree in 1989, based on the successful measurement of neutrinos from the Sun with the Kamiokande-II detector, which confirmed the existence of the solar neutrino puzzle.[2] He participated in the historical and first observation of neutrino burst from the Supernova SN1987A[3] and jointly discovered the neutrino oscillations using the Super-Kamiokande detector in 1998.[4]
He then joined the effort of measuring the neutrino oscillations using a neutrino beam produced by an accelerator. As a member of the K2K(KEK-to-Kamioka) collaboration in 2004, he measured one of the neutrino mixing angles.[5]
Dr. Kim started construction of a neutrino detector facility, near a nuclear power plant in Korea, to measure the last unknown neutrino mixing angle in 2006, and completed it in early 2011. He has been leading data collection for the RENO experiment since August. 1, 2011 using the facility.[6]
Awards
Kim and all the members of Kamiokande-II collaboration received Asahi Prize in 1988[7] and the American Astronomy Society's Bruno Rossi Prize in 1989[8] for the detection of a neutrino burst from the Supernova SN1987A. He shared the Asahi Prize in 1999 with Super-Kamiokande collaboration for the observation of atmospheric neutrino oscillation.
Kim was selected as one of world highly cited 5,000 researchers (HCR) by the ISI. He won the 1st Seoul National University's Academic Research Excellence Prize in 2008.
Technical Reports
- "Indication of Electron Neutrino Appearance from an Accelerator-produced Off-axis Muon Neutrino Beam", Physical Review Letters, 107, 041801 (2011)
See also
References
- ^ "Observation of top-quark production in collisions with the collider detector at Fermilab", Physical Review Letters, 74, 2626-2631 (1995)
- ^ "Real-time,directional measurement of B8 neutrinos in the Kamiokande-II detector", Physical Review D, 44, 2241-2260 (1991)
- ^ "Observation of a Neutrino Burst from the Supernova SN1987A", Physical Review Letters, 58, 1490-1493 (1987)
- ^ "Evidence for oscillation of atmospheric neutrinos", Physical Review Letters, 81, 1562-1567 (1998)
- ^ "Indications of Neutrino Oscillation in a 250km Long-Baseline Experiment", Physical Review Letters, 90, 041801 (2003)
- ^ RENO experiment proposal RENO experiment proposal
- ^ Asahi PrizeAsahi Prize
- ^ Bruno Rossi Prize1989 Bruno Rossi Prize