Saskia Mioduszewski | |
Nationality: | |
Fields: | Experimental nuclear physics |
Thesis Title: | Centrality dependence of antiproton production in Proton-Nucleus Collisions at 17.5 and 12.3 GeV |
Thesis Url: | https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/45405209 |
Thesis Year: | 1999 |
Website: | https://cyclotron.tamu.edu/mio/ |
Saskia Mioduszewski is a nuclear physicist and professor at Texas A&M University.
Mioduszewski completed an undergraduate degree in physics and mathematics in 1994 at North Carolina State University. In 2000, she obtained her PhD in physics from the University of Tennessee.[1] Her PhD thesis was called Centrality dependence of antiproton production in Proton-Nucleus Collisions at 17.5 and 12.3 GeV.[2]
Between 2000 and 2005, Mioduszewski was a postdoctoral research associate at Brookhaven National Laboratory. During this time, she contributed to the PHENIX Experiment at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC).
In 2005, she became an assistant professor at Texas A&M University. She continues to work with the RHIC on the STAR Collaboration and is a member of the Cyclotron Institute.[3] She is interested in studying ultra-relativistic heavy-ion collisions. In particular, she studies the transition between nuclear or "hadronic" matter and the state known as Quark Gluon Plasma.
An application of Mioduszewski's work is in replicating conditions similar to just after the Big Bang by colliding gold particles accelerated to nearly the speed of light. The result of the high-speed collisions is a new particle called an "anti-hypertriton". The particles then cool and decay over lifetimes shorter than nanosecond timescales. These experiments are carried out at RHIC and may help improve understanding of nuclear interactions as well as the distribution of matter and antimatter in the universe. Today, matter appears to be far more prevalent than antimatter, and this asymmetry remains an active research area.[4] [5]
Mioduszewski is married to Ralf Rapp, another physics professor at Texas A&M University. They have a son.[12] [13]