Prize Recipient


Recipient Picture

Blair Seidlitz
Columbia University

Citation:

"For developing the experimental access of high-multiplicity photo-nuclear interactions and a novel investigation of collective phenomena in this system."

Background:

Blair Seidlitz grew up in Wisconsin and attended the University of Wisconsin, Madison, where he obtained a B.S. in Engineering Physics. As an undergraduate he conducted research in plasma physics with Cary Forest, applying optical emission spectroscopy techniques for measurements of the electron temperature in the Plasma Couette Experiment and the Madison Plasma Dynamo Experiment. During his graduate studies he moved on to more strongly coupled plasmas, the quark-gluon plasma, in Jamie Nagle and Dennis Perepelitsa's high energy nuclear physics program at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Here, he had access to the diverse physics program of ATLAS at the Large Hadron Collider. Blair focused on the exploration of collectivity of the particles produced in high energy collisions, specifically the first explorations of highly energetic photon-nucleus collisions, where he developed the tools and techniques needed to study such collisions in the ultra-relativistic regime provided by the LHC. This led to observations of how the hadronic components of the photon wave function could lead to collective interactions. He is now at Columbia University where he continues his work on ATLAS and is co-convener of the calorimeter calibration task force for the sPHENIX experiment, the first new heavy ion detector in more than a decade, located at Brookhaven National Laboratory’s Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider.