Oliver Keith Baker | |
Birth Date: | 18 July 1959 |
Birth Place: | McGehee, Arkansas |
Nationality: | American |
Field: | Particle Physics Astrophysics |
Work Institution: | Yale University Hampton University ATLAS Collaboration |
Alma Mater: | Stanford University Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Doctoral Advisor: | Arthur B. C. Walker Jr. |
Prizes: | Edward A. Bouchet Award (2002) |
Oliver Keith Baker is an American experimental particle physicist and astrophysicist, best known for his work on the Higgs boson and dark matter. In 2002, he won the Edward Alexander Bouchet Award of the American Physical Society: "For his contribution to nuclear and particle physics; for building the infrastructure to do these measurements; and for being active in outreach activities, both locally and nationally."[1]
Oliver Keith Baker was born in McGehee, Arkansas in 1959 to parents Oliver and Yvonne Baker, and grew up in Memphis, Tennessee.[2]
Keith Baker received his B.S. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1981. Baker completed both his M.S. in physics and mathematics in 1984 and his Ph.D. in physics in 1987 from Stanford working on experimental nuclear physics.
Baker completed a post-doc at Los Alamos National Laboratory from 1986 to 1988 conducting research on muon catalyzed fusion. After his post-doc, Baker joined Hampton University in 1989[3] as an assistant professor in the physics department with a joint appointment as a staff scientist at Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. In 2002, Baker received an Endowed University Professorship from Hampton University for his contributions to experimental nuclear and particle physics research as well as his work in outreach activities.
In 2006, Baker began professorship at Yale University where he was the first tenured African American faculty member in the physics department.[4] Baker is a member of the ATLAS Collaboration, which in 2012 discovered the Higgs boson predicted by the Standard Model.[5] Baker also models dark sector analogues of Standard Model photons called paraphotons, which may be experimentally supported by observing the spectrum of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays from BL Lacertae objects.[6]
In 2010, Baker became director of Yale's A. W. Wright Nuclear Structure Laboratory,[7] [8] which includes state-of-the-art facilities for the study of neutrinos, dark matter and fundamental physics. In February 2021 he was appointed to Yale's D. Allan Bromley Professorship of Physics.[9]