Charles Baltay
Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), Quasar Equatorial Survey Team (QUEST) Camera
I am an experimentalist concentrating on fundamental issues, be that in particle physics, astrophysics, or cosmology.
In the nineteen sixties used the exposures of various Bubble Chambers at Brookhaven and SLAC to antiproton, kaon, and pion beams to study the then recently discovered strongly decaying particle states (resonances) and CP violation in eta meson and kaon decays.
In the nineteen seventies studied neutrino interactions in the Fermilab 15 foot bubble chamber measuring purely leptonic neutral currents to measure the Weinberg angle and find strange particle production as evidence of charm particle decays.
In the nineteen eighties and nineties severed as co-spokesman of the SLC experiment at the SLAC Linear Collider (the SLC) to carry out precision electroweak measurements via Zo production and decays.
More recently I have been working in Astrophysics and Cosmology, studying the nature of Dark Energy, the mysterious component that makes up three quarters of our universe, yet we know essentially nothing about it. We do this both from ground-based telescopes in the Andes in Chile in South America, and from a space mission, formerly WFIRST, now the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, via the study of distant Supernova explosion events.
For Fun
Skiing and sailing with a large family.
Taught both Undergraduate and Graduate courses ranging from Introductory Freshman Physics to Graduate General Relativity.