Maria Spiropulu
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Maria Spiropulu (or Spiropoulou) was born in 1970 inKastoria, a small mountain town of Greece, and is an experimental physicist; she is currently based at CERN, the European high-energy physics laboratory outside Geneva, and is working on experiments for the Large Hadron Collider. These experiments are designed to test some of the most imaginative and far reaching ideas ever proposed in physics and are hoped to be completed by April 2007. She describes her work as part of the search to discover the origins of the universe.
Maria Spiropulu received her Bachelor’s degree from the Physics Department of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in 1993. She had already begun research activity from 1991, working as a technical assistant at CERN’S DELPHI and later at BESSY, the synchrotron laboratory in Berlin, Germany. Right after graduation she crossed the Atlantic Ocean and went to Harvard University in Boston, for her PhD in particle physics.
For the next seven years her time was shared between Boston and Batavia, Illinois, home of Tevatron, the world’s highest energy particle accelerator at that time, where she worked for the Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF) experiment. For her Doctoral thesis, which was completed in August 21, 2000, Spiropulu developed a “blind” analysis, to search the accelerator’s output data for evidence of supersymmetry.
Throughout her “schooling”, she had other interests. She played drums and sang for a Fermilab band called "Drug Sniffing Dogs" (a particular exotic band, with a repertoire ranging from Metal to Jazz), until she was expelled for not attending rehearsals. She also practiced for several years in martial arts, especially karate, and later went on her way by doing kick boxing. In her early teens, she wanted to be an F-16 pilot and then an astronaut.
With a new PhD from Harvard, Maria Spiropulu joined the University of Chicago in 2001, and began searching for spatial extra-dimensions. Her analysis was based on Tevatron data obtained from 1992 to 1996. She was offered a research physicist position at CERN’s LHC in 2003, but before joining CERN, she worked for the University of California, Santa Barbara, where she set up extra dimensions analyses with RunII data. On September 19, 2003, she reported, along with Kevin Burkett of Harvard, that any extra-dimensions, if they exist, must be curled up into circles smaller than a hundredth of an inch.
The hunting for physics beyond the Standard Model, including signal for supersymmetry and extra dimensions/Kaluza-Klein gravitons, led Maria Spiropulu, in 2004, back to Geneva and CERN, where the LHC will turn on with an energy seven times larger than Tevatron. There, together with thousands of physicists, she helps prepare for a revolution she says “will blow our minds”.
[edit] Publications
- M. Spiropulu (2004). Experimental Status of Beyond the Standard Model Collider Searches. Czech. J. Phys. 54. [1]
- M. Spiropulu (2003). Collider Experiment: Strings, Branes and Extra Dimensions. [2]
- J. Hewett, and M. Spiropulu (2002). Particle Physics Probes Of Extra Spacetime Dimensions. Ann. Rev. Nucl. Part. Phys. [3]
- T. Affolder et al. (2002). The CDF Collaboration. Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 241802
- M. Spiropulu (2000). Harvard University Ph.D thesis