Stephen Parke is a New Zealand-American theoretical physicist. He is a distinguished scientist and former head (2010-2015) of the Theoretical Physics Department at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Batavia, Illinois. [1]

Stephen Parke
Born
NationalityNew Zealand
United Kingdom
United States
Alma materCampion College, Gisborne
St Peter's College, Auckland
University of Auckland
Harvard University
Known forParke–Taylor amplitudes, analytic understanding of MSW effect and top quark spin correlations/quantum entanglement
Scientific career
FieldsTheoretical physics
InstitutionsStanford Linear Accelerator Center
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Doctoral advisorSidney Coleman
Other academic advisorsSidney Drell

Born in Gisborne, New Zealand, Parke attended Campion College, Gisborne and St Peter's College, Auckland. He did his undergraduate studies, mathematics and physics, at the University of Auckland in New Zealand where his mentor was Dan Walls. He obtained a Fulbright Travel Grant and was awarded a Frank Knox Memorial Fellowship to attend graduate school at Harvard University. He was a graduate student of Sidney Coleman, obtaining a PhD in theoretical particle physics in 1980. He held a postdoctoral fellowship at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (1980–1983) collaborating with Sidney Drell before moving to the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory as an Associate Scientist.[2]. He became an APS fellow in 1996 and in 2018 he was awarded a Doctorate of Science from the University of Auckland for his work on "Amplitudes in Gauge Theories". Parke's Erdos number is 3, having written papers with both Sidney Coleman and mathematician Terence Tao.

Contributions to physics

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He is an originator of Parke–Taylor amplitudes, which he developed with his colleague, Tomasz Taylor.[3] Parke-Taylor amplitudes represent a new approach to computing scattering amplitudes in quantum chromodynamics using symmetry methods such as supersymmetry. This work was further extended with in collaboration with Michelangelo Mangano and Xu Zhan. The discovery of the Parke-Taylor amplitudes ignited the amplitude revolution: a major advance in our understanding and calculability of scattering amplitudes in particle physics. This advance is discussed in detail in Chapter 11 of Graham Farmelo's book "The Universe speaks in Numbers". Parke's important Amplitude papers are linked here.

With collaborator Gregory Mahon and others he pioneered the study of spin correlations in Top Quark pair production at Hadron collider which has lead to the confirmation of quantum entanglement at the highest possible energy by ATLAS and CMS [4]. Here is a link to his important Top Quark papers.

Parke is also an expert on neutrino physics[5]. He gave the first analytical solution to the MSW effect including the non-adabatic region and has made important contributions to the physics of Long baseline Neutrino Oscillation experiments, T2K, NOvA, Hyper-Kamiokande and DUNE as well as the reactor experiments RENO, Daya Bay and JUNO. Here is a link to his important Neutrino papers.

He has also written papers on Magnetic Monopoles and the decay of the false vacuum in curved space time.

Personnal Life

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Parke's father was the orthopedic surgeon William Parke and mother Muriel Parke (nee Stephens), a school teacher. His parents both born in Liverpool immigrated from the UK to New Zealand in 1949 to help with the polio epidemic raging in New Zealand at that time. Parke is a nephew of marine botanist Mary Parke.

Parke is married to Winifred Haun, the MacArthur Foundation and 3Arts award winning Choreographer and Artistic Director of the contemporary dance company Winifred Haun & Dancers. WH&D is one of the more diverse and innovative dance companies in Chicago. They have three amazing daughters: Athena, Iris and Selene.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Rutherford explanation this week". University of Canterbury. 26 May 2008.
  2. ^ "Stephen J. Parke". inspirehep.net. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  3. ^ Wolchover, Natalie (17 September 2013). "A Jewel at the Heart of Quantum Physics". Quanta Magazine.
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ Wolchover, Natalie (13 November 2019). "Neutrinos Lead to Unexpected Discovery in Basic Math". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
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