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Kerstin Tackmann
Experiments ATLAS and Belle II
Kerstin Tackmann is Leading Scientist at DESY and professor for experimental particle physics at Universität Hamburg. She is member of the ATLAS collaboration at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, and of the Belle II collaboration at KEK in Tsukuba, Japan. Her research at the ATLAS experiment focuses on the measurement of the properties of the Higgs boson, which was discovered by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations in 2012. At the Belle II experiment, she is interested in B-meson decays that allow to determine quark-mixing as well as the b-quark mass. In the past, Kerstin Tackmann has worked at the BABAR experiment at SLAC in California, USA.
Academic career
Since 2018 | Leading Scientist at DESY and Professor at Universität Hamburg |
Since 2016 | Leader of an ERC Starting Grant project at DESY |
2011-2016 | Leader of a Helmholtz Young Investigator Group at DESY |
2008-2011 | Research fellow at CERN, Geneva, Switzerland |
2008 | PhD in Physics, University of California, Berkeley, USA |
2004 | Diploma in Physics, Technische Universität Dresden |
Memberships
Since 2019 | Belle II Collaboration, KEK, Tsukuba, Japan |
Since 2008 | ATLAS Collaboration at LHC, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland |
2005 - 2008 | BABAR Collaboration, SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA |
Since 2004 | Member of the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (DPG), Germany |