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I supervise projects in particle physics. My main emphasis is on phenomenology, comparison of predictions with experimental measurements. I follow developments in flavour physics: weak decays
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are supported by quantum mechanical theoretical formalisms. Our fundamental findings yield promise for future applications in electronics, optoelectronics, spintronics, information processing and storage, sensing
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between theoretical and computational high-energy physics. The research contributes to the world-leading PYTHIA Monte Carlo Event Generator, which serves as the baseline for the majority of experimental
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University as the new Head of School of Physics and Astronomy. In addition to my research at Monash, I hold the Lee-Lucas Chair in Experimental Physics at Imperial College London. Our research work is highly
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to uncover the role of structure in the glass transition and how the disordered structure of a glass gives rise to unique glass behaviour such as ageing and brittle mechanical failure. Unlike crystals which
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are made where and when; supernovae (mechanisms and nucleosynthesis); gamma-ray bursts and their progenitors; modelling of Type I X-ray bursts and superbursts (thermonuclear explosions on the surface