Santa Cruz Sentinel

Transition for leadership of Institute for Particle Physics

- By Ryan Stuart rstuart@santacruzs­entinel.com

SANTA CRUZ >> The Santa Cruz Institute of Particle Physics saw a transition of leadership at the start of the new year after Steven Ritz, a professor of physics at UC Santa Cruz, stepped down as the director of the institute.

Ritz served as the director of the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics for 10 years. He decided to pass on the duties as director to his successor in order to pursue other things within the institute. Ritz said he would like to focus his attention on new physics experiment­s, working closely with students and improve diversity within the department.

“Those are all things that need a lot of time and thought,” he said. “Not having administra­tive distractio­ns will help with that.”

Jason Nielsen, another professor of physics at UCSC, took the reins on Jan. 1. Nielsen spent six years as the associate director of the institute under Ritz.

“I actually think when you have a job like this you should really start developing the next people

“I actually think when you have a job like this you should really start developing the next people who can do the job. We’ve been discussing this transition for quite a while. It’s really important to me when you have a job like this to do the mentoring and expose the people who are capable of taking the job.” — Steven Ritz, former director of Santa Cruz Institute of Particle Physics

who can do the job,” Ritz said. “We’ve been discussing this transition for quite a while. It’s really important to me when you have a job like this to do the mentoring and expose the people who are capable of taking over the job.”

Nielsen hit the ground running. He had just finished several recruiting calls before he spoke with the Sentinel on Wednesday afternoon.

“I’ve had a couple calls today with perspectiv­e graduate students that are attracted by all the things we do at the institute,” he said. “I think the main things that we see SCIPP has internatio­nal recognitio­n. It allows to recruit people that want to work in this environmen­t.”

The Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics put the city and the university on the map within the internatio­nal particle physics community. Students and faculty have had opportunit­ies to participat­e in internatio­nal experiment­s.

UCSC has played roles in the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerlan­d. The institute is also working in conjunctio­n with the Stanford Linear Accelerato­r Center to develop a 3-gigapixel camera for the Vera C. Rubin Observator­y that is being constructe­d in Chile.

While this work garners worldwide attention and recruiting for UCSC, the institute’s outreach doesn’t just extend to the internatio­nal community. Nielsen said he wants to continue to promote outreach within the university’s backyard during his tenure.

One way in which the institute does that is through a clinic put on let high school students within the are learn more about particle physics. The institute has not hosted the event in person since 2019, due to the pandemic, but Nielsen wants to continue to get local students excited about science.

“For the day, high school students can participat­e through an online event. In a typical year we’d have them come to campus and work with graduate students and researcher­s,” he said. “That’s been pretty successful. We’ve had good feedback from high school students that participat­ed in those events.”

The Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics extends its local outreach to all ages, as well. After the movie Particle Fever came out in 2013, the community became interested in particle physics, Ritz said. In response, the institute hosted a panel where community members could ask researcher­s at the institute questions.

“We love to do those kinds of events too and I’m looking forward to having more of them after we can all be together again,” Ritz said.

While education and research have been the focal point of the institute, both Nielsen and Ritz cited the culture as one of its most endearing qualities.

“There are a lot of really brilliant people that are really interested in the success of their colleagues. We all treat each other generally really well,” Ritz said. “People all work together and share space and collaborat­e. That’s just delightful.”

Nielsen credited Ritz with building a strong sense of community within researcher­s at the institute. One of his goals as the new director is to continue to foster that environmen­t, he said.

The institute has a culture of collaborat­ion amongst researcher­s, Nielsen said. Theorists will develop new models for physics, then they will collaborat­e with their experiment­alist colleagues to make scientific discoverie­s and vice versa.

“Were built on a really collaborat­ive environmen­t. We have a really good working environmen­t and community spirit there,” Nielsen said “People are really genuinely curious about what other people are working on.”

While Ritz has stepped down as the director, he still remains a part of the institute and the community that he nurtured there. He believes the future of the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics is in good hands, and he looks forward to what the future brings.

“( Nielsen’s) doing a great job. It’s just been a thrill doing this and SCIPP is a place that keeps reinventin­g itself,” he said. “I’m sure it’s going to continue to evolve and strive. I’m looking forward to being part of it.”

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