American Physical Society
APS SitesAPSJournalsPhysicsCentralPhysicsFocus
 
Become a Member | Contact Us
  • Publications
    • Journals of the American Physical Society
    • APS News
    • Physics
    • Physics Today
    • Physical Review Focus
    • Capitol Hill Quarterly
    • Other APS Publications
    • Reciprocal Society Newsletters
  • Meetings & Events
    • March Meeting
    • April Meeting
    • Meeting Calendar
    • Abstract Submission
    • Archives of the Bulletin of the American Physical Society
    • Policies & Guidelines
    • Archived Multimedia Presentations
  • Programs
    • Education
    • International Affairs
    • Physics for All
    • Women in Physics
    • Minorities in Physics
    • Prizes, Awards & Fellowships
  • Membership
    • Join APS
    • Renew Membership
    • Member Directory
    • My Member Profile
    • Member Services
    • APS Units
  • Policy & Advocacy
    • Issues
    • Reports & Studies
    • APS Statements
    • Advocacy Tools
    • Advocacy Resources
    • Fellowships & Fellows
    • Contact APS Public Affairs
  • Careers In Physics
    • Physics Job Opportunities
    • Physics Students
    • Tools for Educators
    • Career Guidance
  • About APS
    • Mission Statement
    • Society Governance
    • Society History
    • Support APS
    • APS Jobs
    • Contact Us
    • Visit Us
Programs
  • Education
  • International Affairs
  • Physics for All
  • Women in Physics
  • Minorities in Physics
  • Prizes, Awards & Fellowships
    • Prizes
    • Awards, Medals & Lectureships
    • Dissertation Awards
    • Fellowships
    • Other APS Scholarships, Lectureships & Fellowships

 
Home   |   Programs   |   Prizes, Awards and Fellowships   |   Prizes   |   Prize Recipient

Prize Recipient

Email | Print

patterson

Ryan Patterson
California Institute of Technology

Citation:

"A Search for Muon Neutrino to Electron Neutrino > Oscillations at Δ m2 > 0.1 ev2"

Background:

Ryan Patterson received a bachelor of science degree with honors from the California Institute of Technology in 2000. He performed his doctoral research at Princeton University under the supervision of Prof. Peter Meyers, receiving his Ph.D. in 2007. This work was completed on the Booster Neutrino Experiment (MiniBooNE) at Fermilab, which looked to confirm or refute the unexplained neutrino oscillation signal hinted at by earlier results from the LSND experiment at Los Alamos. Dr. Patterson's dissertation presented an analysis of MiniBooNE's first complete neutrino data set. His analysis, which showed no evidence for LSND-like two-flavor oscillations, required the development of many calibration, simulation, and reconstruction techniques to achieve sufficient sensitivity to make a definitive statement. This non-observation of neutrino oscillations was cited by the American Institute of Physics as one of the top physics results of 2007. Dr. Patterson was also a co-recipient of the 2008 URA/Fermilab Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Award. Dr. Patterson is now a Tolman Postdoctoral Scholar at Caltech where he continues investigating the unknowns of the neutrino sector through two long-baseline neutrino experiments, MINOS and NOvA.

Selection Committee:

Bill Ford (Chair), Gary Feldman, David Kirkby, Harold Ogren, Pekka Sinervo

Home | APS Jobs | Media Center | Privacy | Site Map
    © 2009 American Physical Society