
ROBERT DEAN SCHAMBERGER
Research Professor
 Physics and Astronomy
dean.schamberger@stonybrook.edu | (631)-632-8094, Physics D-115 
Curriculum Vitae. (Last updated: 2023 Mar 22)
Biography 
Robert Dean Schamberger is a staff member and Research Professor in the Physics &
                              Astronomy department at Stony Brook University. He got his PhD. from Stony Brook University
                              in 1976. After graduating He participated in multiple Experiments at Fermi National
                              Laboratory from his PhD theses experiment E14 through the DZero experiment at the
                              Tevatron proton antiproton collider. Also in the 1980's he worked on the CUSB experiment
                              at the Cornell electron-positron collider studying the Upsilon resonance's. He joined
                              the ATLAS experiment in 2010, which along with the CMS experiment in 2012 made an
                              historic discovery of the Higgs boson.
Research Statement
My primary research interests concentrate on studies of fundamental particles and
                           their interactions, conducted at highest energy and intensity particle collider's.
                           My major interest is in the development of the readout Electronics which requires
                           continuous updating to handle the increases in rates and resolution over time. My
                           long term physics goal is to understand the mechanism responsible for symmetry breaking
                           of the electroweak sector of SM.
To that extent, I am currently working on the ATLAS Experiment as members of ATLAS
                           collaboration, a large international group of physicists collecting data from proton-proton
                           collisions at center-of-mass energies of 7-14 TeV, the highest collision energy in
                           the world at CERN’s (European Center for Nuclear Research) Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
                           near Geneva, Switzerland. I became a member of ATLAS collaboration after the Fermilab
                           Tevatron Proton antiproton collider closed down. I am an expert in the Liquid Argon
                           Calorimeter detector and readout system, which is of the vital importance for such
                           research.
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