Christine Sutton | |
---|---|
Known for | CERN Courier |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Physics |
Institutions | CERN University of Oxford New Scientist |
Website | home |
Christine Sutton is a particle physicist who edited the CERN Courier from 2003 to 2015.[1] She retired from CERN in 2015.[2]
Sutton was previously based at the University of Oxford, working in the Particle Physics Group and tutoring physics at St Catherine's College.[3]
She was Physical Sciences Editor for New Scientist magazine in the early 1980s, and has authored several non-fiction science books, most recently (with Frank Close and Michael Marten) The Particle Odyssey (1987, 2002).[4]
Contributions to Encyclopædia Britannica
She also contributed to the 2007 Encyclopædia Britannica, with 24 articles on particle physics:[5]
- Argonne National Laboratory (Micropædia article)
- Colliding-Beam Storage Ring (Micropædia article)
- DESY (Micropædia article)
- Electroweak theory (Micropædia article)
- Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Micropædia article)
- Feynman diagram (Micropædia article)
- Flavour (Micropædia article)
- Gluon (Micropædia article)
- Higgs particle (Micropædia article)
- Linear accelerator (Micropædia article)
- Particle accelerators (in part, Macropædia article)
- Quantum chromodynamics (Micropædia article)
- Renormalization (Micropædia article)
- SLAC (Micropædia article)
- Standard model (Micropædia article)
- Strong nuclear force (Micropædia article)
- Subatomic particles (Macropædia article)
- Supergravity (Micropædia article)
- Superstring theory (Micropædia article)
- Supersymmetry (Micropædia article)
- Tau (Micropædia article)
- Unified field theory (Micropædia article)
- Weak nuclear force (Micropædia article)
- Z particle (Micropædia article)
References
- ↑ "So, farewell then". 25 September 2015.
- ↑ "Our Team". cerncourier.com.
- ↑ "Chris Sutton's home page". Archived from the original on 2013-04-19. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
- ↑ Martin Redfern, BBC Radio Science Unit (Nov 1, 2002). "Bookshelf". CERN Courier. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
- ↑ Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. Propædia, volume 30. New York: Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. 2007. p. 547.
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