Wendy Taylor

Professor of Physics, Department of Physics and Astronomy York University

  • Toronto ON

Particle physicist searching for magnetic monopoles at CERN, former Canada Research Chair and advocate for women in physics.

Contact

Media

Social

Biography

Wendy Taylor is a Professor of Physics at York University. After she completed her PhD in physics at the University of
Toronto in 1999, she was a Stony Brook University (NY) postdoctoral fellow based at Fermilab (IL). She then joined the
faculty at York University in 2004, where she held a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Experimental Particle Physics for
10 years. Her research is currently focused on the search for the hypothetical magnetic monopole using the ATLAS
detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider in Geneva, Switzerland.
Wendy’s past leadership roles include President of the Board of Trustees of the Institute of Particle Physics (2023-24),
executive membership of the TRIUMF Board of Management (2018-21), Chair of the CAP Particle Physics Division
(2007-08), and Chair of the CAP Committee to Encourage Women in Physics (1997-99). She has also served on
international, federal, and provincial review panels and award selection committees. Wendy engages with the media
and with the public on particle physics topics. Throughout her career, Wendy has adv

Areas of Expertise

Particle Physics
Physics
Antimatter
Magnetic monopoles
Stable massive particles

Accomplishments

Early Researcher Award

Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation, 2008-2011

Canada Research Chair

Tier II CRC in Experimental Particle Physics, York University, 2004-2014

Education

University of British Columbia

B.Sc. (Hons.)

Physics

1991

University of Toronto

M.Sc.

Physics

1993

University of Toronto

Ph.D.

Physics

1999

Affiliations

  • ATLAS Collaboration, Member
  • TRIUMF Board of Management, Member
  • Canadian Association of Physicists, Member
  • Canadian Institute of Particle Physics, Member
  • American Physical Society, Member

Languages

  • English

Media Appearances

No new particle here, folks

CBC Radio's Quirks and Quarks  radio

2016-09-17

In the summer of 2016, rumours about the discovery of a new particle were squashed when the LHC announced that the signal disappeared after collection of more higher energy data.

View More

The hunt for the truest north

Symmetry Magazine  online

2016-09-14

Interviewed about the search for the Magnetic Monopole with the ATLAS detector

View More

New subatomic particles predicted by Canadians found at CERN

CBCNews.ca  online

2014-11-19

CERN Discovery of two new b-quark baryons

View More

Show All +

Event Appearances

Antimatter: From the Subatomic to the Cosmological Scales

Royal Astronomical Society of Canada  Mississauga

2016-05-27

Panel Discussion member

York Science Forum: Dark Matter and the Dinosaurs  Toronto Reference Library

2015-12-11

Antimatter Isn't Just Science Fiction!

The Science of Science Fiction Series  Agincourt Public Library, Toronto

2015-10-22

Show All +

Research Grants

Upgrades to the ATLAS Detector at the LHC

NSERC Research Tools and Instruments Grant

2017-05-06

2017

The ATLAS Experiment at the CERN LHC

NSERC Discovery Grant

2006-2017

Low-noise, Radiation-tolerant Readout Electronics for the Upgraded ATLAS Inner Tracking Detector

Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation Early Researcher Award

2008-2010

Show All +

Articles

Bottom quark fragmentation fractions in p-pbar collisions at sqrt(s)=1.8 TeV

Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 1663

2000-07-01

Bottom quark fragmentation fractions in p-pbar collisions at sqrt(s)=1.8 TeV

Direct Limits on the B0s oscillation frequency

Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 021802

2006-07-14

We report results of a study of the B0s oscillation frequency using a large sample of B0s semileptonic decays corresponding to approximately 1  fb−1 of integrated luminosity collected by the D0 experiment at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider in 2002–2006. The amplitude method gives a lower limit on the B0s oscillation frequency at 14.8  ps−1 at the 95% C.L. At Δms=19  ps−1, the amplitude deviates from the hypothesis A=0 (1) by 2.5 (1.6) standard deviations, corresponding to a two-sided C.L. of 1% (10%). A likelihood scan over the oscillation frequency, Δms, gives a most probable value of 19  ps−1 and a range of 17

View more

Search for CP violation in B0s→μ+D−sX decays in ppbar collisions at sqrt(s)=1.96 TeV

Phys. Rev. D 82, 012003

2010-07-26

We have performed a search for CP violation in a sample of B0s→μ+D−sX decays corresponding to 5  fb−1 of proton-antiproton collisions collected by the D0 detector in Run II at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider. New physics in B0s mixing could contribute a significant CP violating weak phase, which would be observed as a difference in the decay-time distribution for B0s→anti-B0s oscillated states versus that for anti-B0s→B0s. A fit to the decay-time distributions of the B0s/anti-B0s candidates yields the flavor-specific asymmetry asfs=[−1.7±9.1(stat)+1.4−1.5(syst)]×10−3, which excludes CP violation due to new physics within the experimental sensitivity.

View more

Show All +