Michael B. Schulz: Research Interests - Gravity, Cosmology, and Particle Physics Experiments

While we theorists do not perform experiments ourselves, we still need to pay close attention to what our experimental colleagues are up to. Observation is the ultimate test of any scientific theory. And we are in an exciting time of great potential experimental discovery!

Cosmology

It is the golden age of observational cosmology: As Andre Linde has put it, "the universe is approximately 14 billion years old. A hundred years ago, we did not even know that it is expanding. A few decades from now we will have a detailed map of the observable part of the universe, and this map is not going to change much for the next billion years" — Forward to Physical Foundations of Modern Cosmology, V. Mukhanov, Cambridge (2005).

Here are some links to contemporary and recent cosmology/astrophysics experiments:

Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy (the Seeds of Galaxies)

Galaxy Redshift Surveys (Mapping the Contents of our Universe)

Dark Energy (Driving the Accelerated Expansion of the Universe)

Astrophysics: High Energy Cosmic rays

Gravity

Tests of the Equivalence Principle (i.e., General Relativity)

Gravitational Waves

Particle Physics

Electroweak-Scale Collider Experminents (hunting the Higgs, Supersymmetry & Extra Dimensions)

CP Violation

Neutrino Oscillations (evidence for neutrino mass from solar and atmospheric neutrinos)

(My experimental colleagues at Penn are participating in most of the experiments just listed. See: High Energy Physics Experiments at Penn.)

Nuclear (Heavy ions, quark-gluon plasma)

physics lab

Contact Us

Department of Physics

Park Science Building
ÀÏÍõÂÛ̳
101 N. Merion Avenue
ÀÏÍõÂÛ̳, PA 19010-2899
Phone: 610-526-5358