SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Showing 1-91 of 91 Results
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Anna Rasmussen
Research Assoc-Experimental, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
BioI am interested in how Earth’s smallest constituents, microbes, cycle nutrients in aquatic ecosystems. I earned my PhD from the Department of Earth System Science at Stanford University focused on microbial ecology. I used molecular and biogeochemical approaches to understand the abundance, distribution, and activity of nitrifying bacteria and archaea in San Francisco Bay. My research used DNA, RNA, nitrification rate, and water quality data to uncover and characterize recurring massive ammonia-oxidizing archaea blooms in South Bay. For my postdoctoral work, I will use metagenomics to study subsurface microbial ecology in a river floodplain in collaboration with the Floodplain Hydro-Biogeochemistry Scientific Focus Area managed by a team at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
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Alexander Hume Reid
Lead Scientist, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Current Role at StanfordFacility Director, LCLS MeV-UED
Instrument Scientist at LCLS -
Marc C. Ross
Temporary Employee - TMS, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Current Role at StanfordTechnical Director, LCLS-II-HE Project
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Alex Rousina-Webb
Research Technical Manager, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Current Role at StanfordAt SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, I lead the lab-to-market pipeline for SLAC innovations. My role includes collaborating with Stanford University’s tech transfer program, managing DOE technology transfer initiatives like OTT and SBIR/STTR, and handling SLAC’s intellectual property portfolio. I work closely with the Stanford Office of Technology Licensing to drive innovation from discovery to commercialization.
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Peter C. Rowson
Physicist-Experimental PERM, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
BioExperimental high energy particle physics
1980s - Mark II at PEP (e+e- collisions at 29 GeV)
1990s - SLD at the Stanford Linear Collider (e+e- collisions at the Z pole - Electroweak precision measurements)
Present - Search for neutrinoless double beta decay in xenon 136 (EXO-200, nEXO) -
Jonathan Russell
IT Technical Manager, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Current Role at StanfordChief Information Officer at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
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Silvia Russi
Staff Engineer, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
BioDr. Silvia Russi is a beamline scientist at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL) at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. Earlier in her career, Dr. Russi focused her research on the X-ray structure determination of bioactive organometallic compounds and inorganic complexes at the Universidad de la República, in her home country Uruguay. She moved then to the Structural Biology Group at the IBMB in Barcelona, Spain, to work on the structural characterization of bacterial proteins mediating the transfer of genetic material and spread of antibiotic resistance. After earning her PhD, she first joined the Diffraction Instrumentation Team at the EMBL-Grenoble Outstation, France, to conduct research on a new device for controlled crystal dehydration and then she moved to the Structural Biology Group at the ESRF where she studied new phasing strategies that exploited the anisotropy of the anomalous signal. In May 2013, she joined the SSRL, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, as Beamline Scientist. She provides scientific and technical support to visiting scholars and users of the macromolecular crystallography beamlines and perform research developing new experimental methods and instrumentation to accelerate protein crystallography experiments such as with the current Stanford Auto-Mounter (SAM) crystal-mounting robot and to implement fully automated, remotely-accessible, room temperature X-ray diffraction experiments.