Fabiola Gianotti

Fabiola Gianotti

Affiliation
CERN

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Professor Fabiola Gianotti is the Director-General of CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics.

She received a Ph.D. in experimental particle physics from the University of Milano in 1989. Since 1994 she is a research physicist at CERN, and since 2013 an honorary Professor at the University of Edinburgh. She is an associate member of the Italian Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences of the United States, the French Academy of Sciences, the Royal Society, London, the Royal Irish Academy and the Russian Academy of Sciences. Dr Gianotti has worked on several CERN experiments, covering detector R&D and construction, software development and data analysis.

From March 2009 to February 2013 she held the elected position of project leader (”Spokesperson”) of the ATLAS experiment. On 4 July 2012 she presented the ATLAS results on the search for the Higgs boson in a seminar at CERN that saw the formal announcement of the discovery of this special particle by the ATLAS and CMS experiments. She received twelve honorary doctoral degrees from Universities across the world and was a member of several international scientific committees.

Dr Gianotti was awarded the honour of “Cavaliere di Gran Croce dell’Ordine al Merito della Repubblica Italiana”. She received the Special Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, the Enrico Fermi Prize of the Italian Physical Society, the Medal of Honour of the Niels Bohr Institute (Copenhagen), the Wilhelm Exner Medal (Vienna) and the Tate medal of the American Institute of Physics for International Leadership.

She was included among the Guardian newspaper’s “Top 100 most inspirational women” in 2011, ranked 5th in Time magazine’s Personality of the Year in 2012, included among the “Top 100 most influential women” by Forbes magazine (USA, 2013 and 2017) and considered among the “Leading Global Thinkers of 2013” by Foreign Policy magazine (USA, 2013).

Appointed Director-General of CERN in November 2014 for the period 1 January 2016 to 31 December 2020, in November 2019 she was appointed for a second term, from 1 January 2021 to 31 December 2025. This is the first time in CERN’s history that a Director-General is reappointed for a full second term.

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