Anadi Canepa
Senior Scientist
Telephone: (630) 840-5402 E-mail: acanepa@fnal.gov Office Location: WH11SE
Areas of Focus: Project planning, Project management, Tracker, Higgs physics, BSM
Biography
My research field is experimental particle physics, with focus on searches for new phenomena and the study of the electroweak symmetry breaking mechanism. My program also includes development of trigger systems and silicon-based tracking detectors at hadron colliders. I have been developing the program at the CMS experiment (2015-today), after having been a member of the ATLAS (2008-2015) and CDF (2000-2011) collaborations. I currently serve as the head of the CMS department at Fermilab, the L3 manager for Electronics for the Outer Tracker WBS (HL-LHC CMS upgrade project), the scientific secretary of the Fermilab Physics Advisory Committee, and the co-convener of the energy frontier working group at the laboratory.
Education:
2006 PhD, Purdue University
2000, Laurea, Padova University
Professional Experience:
2018-present Senior Scientist, Fermilab
2015-2018 Scientist, Fermilab
2013-2015 Board Appointed Research Scientist, TRIUMF
2013-2015 Honorary Lecturer at the University of British Columbia, UBC.
2008-2013 Board Appointed Research Scientist, TRIUMF
Selected Publications:
A. Canepa and T. Han, “Searches for Electroweakinos”, Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science, accepted.
2019 A. Canepa, “Searches for supersymmetry at the Large Hadron Collider”, Reviews in Physics 4 (2019) 100033.
2019 CMS Collaboration, “Beam Test Performance of Prototype Silicon Detectors for the Outer Tracker for the Phase-2 Upgrade of CMS”, JINST 15 (2020) P03014.
2018 X. Cid Vidal et al., “Beyond the Standard Model Physics at the HL-LHC and HE-LHC”, arXiv:1812.07831.
2017 CMS Collaboration, “Search for supersymmetry in events with one lepton and multiple jets in proton- proton collisions at $\sqrt{s}$= 13 TeV”, Phys. Lett. B 780 (2018) 384.
2015 ATLAS Collaboration, “Search for direct production of charginos and neutralinos decaying via the 125 GeV Higgs boson in $\sqrt{s}$= 8 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector”, Eur. Phys. J. C (2015) 75.
Personal website: https://home.fnal.gov/~acanepa/Welcome.html