Manuella Vincter is a professor in the Department of Physics at Carleton University.[1] She is the deputy spokesperson for the ATLAS experiment,[2] and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.[3]

Manuella Vincter
AwardsCanada Research Chair (2010-2015)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Victoria
Academic work
DisciplineExperimental particle physics
InstitutionsUniversity of Alberta
Carleton University

Career

edit

Vincter earned her B.Sc. in 1990 from McGill University, her M.Sc. in 1993 and her PhD in 1996, both at the University of Victoria. Her PhD thesis was on the precision measurement of the ratio of vector to axial-vector coupling of the weak force, which she conducted at the LEP collider at CERN as a member of the OPAL Experiment. She then joined the faculty at the University of Alberta, where she worked on the HERMES experiment at the DESY laboratory and also joined the ATLAS collaboration. She then joined Carleton University as a Canada Research Chair in Experimental Particle Physics, and was appointed Deputy Spokesperson for the ATLAS-Canada team. She was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in 2018, and in 2019 she was appointed Deputy Spokesperson for the ATLAS collaboration.

Research area

edit

Vincter's research is in experimental particle physics, with a focus on identifying and reconstructing the path of electrons in the ATLAS experiment. This allows for precise measurement of the electroweak interactions through the decay of W and Z bosons into electrons. She has also done research on the strong force and the structure of nucleons.

References

edit
  1. ^ Carleton University
  2. ^ ATLAS Collaboration Management
  3. ^ Vlasveld, Mike (Sep 16, 2018). "Carleton's Manuella Vincter elected fellow of the Royal Society of Canada". CityNews.
edit