
Professor Jonas Rademacker
M.Sc.(Soton.), Ph.D.(Oxon.)
Current positions
Professor of Physics
School of Physics
Contact
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Research interests
My particle physics research focuses on the subtle differences between matter and the mirror-image of anti-matter, called charge partity (CP) violation, and other aspects of quark flavour physics. Quark flavour physics is the precision study of how different quarks transform into each other. These transitions are the only known source of CP violation. But the most exciting aspects of this research is that it is highly sensitive to physics beyond the Standard Model of particle physics.
The Standard Model of particle physics is the current, highly successful theory describing the fundamental building blocks of matter and how they interact. It has passed numerous experimental tests - a spectacular example is its prediction of a heavy spin-0 particle, the Higgs boson, that was recently discovered at the Large Hadron Collider at the CERN. But despite this success, the Standard Model of particle physics cannot be the full story. It fails to address such fundamental questions as the baryon asymmetry of the universe (i.e. our own existence), dark matter and dark energy, and gravity; it has too many free parameters, and suffers from self-consistency problems (the fine-tuning and hierarchy problem). Nearly all alternatives to the Standard Model that address these problems predict the existence of new, heavy particles.
Flavour physics is sensitive to quantum loops that can be affected by new particles with masses even beyond those that can be directly produced at the highest-energy colliders - it allows us to see beyond the energy frontier. This makes it highly sensitive to physics beyond the Standard Model. The observed size of the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the universe proves that additional, undiscovered sources of CP violation must exist. CP violation measurements, which are the domain of flavour physics, hold therefore particular promise in the search for New Physics.
With the start of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, a new generation flavour physics experiment started taking. LHCb will be able to make measurements of unprecedented precision, and thus unprecedented New-Physics reach. With its first data it has already made dramatic new measurements of key paramters, letting us glimpse further beyond the energy frontier than ever before
I work with my colleagues from Bristol's flavour physics group on exploiting the huge opportunity for precision flavour physics that the LHCb experiment offers, and the even more spectacular results we expect from the LHCb-upgrade. In particular, we work on precision measurements of CP violation in charm, and on the measurement of the key CP-violation parameter gamma. In order to reach the ultimate precision, we use innovative amplitude analysis methods, and data from other experiments, especially CLEO-c, as input. We recently obtained a ERC research grant to expand this research.
There are frequently opportunities for PhD students to join me in this reasearch. Please contact me for details.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
LHCb Upgrade II Preconstruction
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of PhysicsDates
01/04/2024 to 30/09/2026
LHCb Upgrade II: Maximising HL-LHC Discovery Potential
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of PhysicsDates
01/10/2021 to 30/09/2023
8100 LHCb Upgrade II - year 1, bridging funds (with capital) (ST/V003089/1)
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of PhysicsDates
01/10/2020 to 30/09/2021
FSI in hadron decays
Principal Investigator
Description
The precision study of complex multibody decays of bottom and charm hadrons has unique sensitivity to new fundamental particles and interactions that could give rise to the matter-antimatter asymmetry of…Managing organisational unit
School of PhysicsDates
18/03/2019 to 17/03/2021
DUNE: Pre-Construction Phase
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of PhysicsDates
01/10/2017 to 30/09/2020
Thesis supervisions
First model independent measurement of the CKM angle γ using B±→DK± and B±→Dπ±, D→2π+2π- decays at LHCb
Supervisors
Study of the decay B0→ D0D0K+π− with the LHCb experiment
Supervisors
A reconfigurable silicon quantum photonic device for machine learning applications
Supervisors
2GeV π+−Ar Exclusive Cross Section Measurement at ProtoDUNE
Supervisors
Amplitude analysis of the B 0 → D 0 D 0 Kπ decay with the LHCb experiment
Supervisors
Neutrino interaction identification for the DUNE trigger
Supervisors
Measurements of the local and non-local contributions in B±→K±μ±μ∓ decays using LHCb data
Supervisors
Unbinned amplitude analysis of the $B^0 \rightarrow K^{*0}\mu^+\mu^-$ decay using an amplitude ansatz method at the LHCb experiment
Supervisors
A Measurement of Interference from D-mixing in D0→Kπππ events at LHCb during Run 2 of the LHC
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
08/01/2025Amplitude analysis of B+ → ψ(2S)K+π+π− decays
Journal of High Energy Physics
Constraints on the photon polarisation in b → sγ transitions using B0s→ ϕe+e− decays
Journal of High Energy Physics
Long-lived particle reconstruction downstream of the LHCb magnet
European Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields
Measurement of CP violation in B0 → D+D− and B0s → D+sD−s decays
Journal of High Energy Physics
Measurement of the CKM angle γ in B± → DK*(892)± decays
Journal of High Energy Physics