Sonia Bacca is an Italian physicist known for her calculations of the interaction forces of small systems of nucleic particles. She is University Professor in Theoretical Physics at the Institute for Nuclear Physics of the University of Mainz in Germany.[1][2]
Education and career
editBacca is originally from Italy,[2] and completed a doctorate jointly between the University of Mainz and the University of Trento in Italy in 2005. After postdoctoral research at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research she became a researcher at the TRIUMF particle accelerator in Vancouver, Canada, in 2008,[1][2] also becoming an honorary lecturer at the University of British Columbia.[3] She returned to Mainz as a professor in 2017.[1][2]
Recognition
editBacca was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS) in 2019, after a nomination from the APS Topical Group on Few-Body Systems & Multiparticle Dynamics, "for first-principles calculations of the electromagnetic response of nuclei, leading to insights into the microscopic origin of the giant dipole resonance, nuclear polarizability corrections in muonic atoms, and the role of three-nucleon forces in electromagnetic reactions".[4][5]
References
edit- ^ a b c Univ.-Prof. Dr. Sonia Bacca, Institute for Nuclear Physics, University of Mainz, retrieved 2020-07-07
- ^ a b c d Professor Dr. SONIA BACCA: PRISMA Professorship for Theoretical Physics, Cluster of excellence PRISMA+: Precision Physics, Fundamental Interactions and Structure of Matter, University of Mainz, retrieved 2020-07-07
- ^ Sonia Bacca, UBC Department of Physics & Astronomy, retrieved 2020-07-07
- ^ APS Fellows Nominated by GFB: 2019, APS Topical Group on Few-Body Systems & Multiparticle Dynamics, retrieved 2020-07-07
- ^ Sonia Bacca elected Fellow of the American Physical Society: Major award for the theoretical physicist, a member of the PRISMA+ Cluster of Excellence, University of Mainz, 27 September 2019, retrieved 2020-07-07
External links
edit- Sonia Bacca publications indexed by Google Scholar