James T Linnemann

Professor Emeritus, Department of Physics & Astronomy
Location: Biomed Phys Sci
Profile photo of  James T Linnemann
Photo of: James T Linnemann

Bio

I'm an experimenter in [High Energy Physics](https://pa.msu.edu/research/high-energy-physics-hep) and Astroparticle Physics. I am currently working on the [HAWC experiment](http://hawc.pa.msu.edu/) in Mexico at 13,500 feet altitude, measuring cosmic ray photons with TeV energies.

I often work on triggering (online selection of which events to analyze in detail) and was in charge of electronics during HAWC construction. I enjoy improving statistical techniques to get the most out of our data. In the [ATLAS experiment](https://pa.msu.edu/research/high-energy-physics/atlas-experiment) at the [CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC),](http://lhc.web.cern.ch/lhc/) I’ve studied how to improve our triggering, including how best to use an electronics board built at MSU as part of an ATLAS upgrade in 2014. At the [D0 Tevatron experiment](http://www-d0.fnal.gov/) at [Fermilab](http://www.fnal.gov/) near Chicago I’ve searched for supersymmetric particles. In HAWC, we built some custom electronics (thanks to our excellent electronics designers), and we are applying multivariate analysis techniques we’ve used at collider experiments to improve the energy measurement at HAWC. Our group previously found new objects in the sky emitting TeV gamma rays, and we are eagerly searching for more. We already are seeing interesting results from the recently commissioned HAWC detector. We are searching for black holes left over from the big bang which decay explosively via Hawking radiation. We recently found that these explosions might even reveal traces of supersymmetric particles out of the reach of the LHC. We also study the relationship between lower energy pulsar radiation (seen by the Fermi satellite) and the TeV radiation seen in the nebula and supernova remnants surrounding neutron stars.

# Education:
* 1978: Ph.D., Cornell University