Alan Litke
Adjunct Professor of Physics
Ph.D. Harvard University, 1970
| Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellow, 1978-82
| Mellon Fellow, 1978-79
Office: CERN, Geneva Switzerland
Phone: 011-41-22-767 7376
FAX: 011-41-22-767 9425
e-mail: alan.litke@cern.ch
Research Interests
Alan Litke's research interests are in the fields of
experimental particle physics and neurobiology.
In particle physics, he is currently doing research
with the highest energy electron-positron collisions ever
achieved. This work is done with the ALEPH experiment at CERN.
He and his CERN-based group are searching for new particles and new
phenomena, including the Higgs boson, supersymmetric particles, and
effects due to TeV-scale quantum gravity.
Litke's research in neurobiology is aimed at understanding the
neural code that the eye uses to send information about the
visual world to the brain. In the Retinal Readout Project,
he is developing a neural imaging system to study how a
large collection of neurons (the retina) processes, encodes and
communicates information.
Collaboration Involvement:
ALEPH,
Retinal Readout Project
Selected Publications
Single and Multi-photon Production in e+e-
Collisions at a Centre-of-mass Energy of 183 GeV,
the ALEPH Collaboration, Phys. Lett. B429
(1998) 201.
Search for Extra Spatial Dimensions and TeV Scale Quantum
Gravity at LEP, the ALEPH Collaboration, ALEPH 99-051
(June, 1999); available on WWW at
http://alephwww.cern.ch/ALPUB/conf/conf.html.
The Retinal Readout System: an Application of Microstrip Detector
Technology to Neurobiology, A.M. Litke, Nucl. Instrum.
and Methods A418 (1998) 203.
The Silicon Microstrip Detector,
A.M. Litke and A.S. Schwarz,
Scientific American 272 (5), 56 (1995).
Page created August 2000
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