Art McDonald was the Director of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) in Ontario, Canada, for more than 20 years, where he led a team of international collaborators in discovering that elementary subatomic particles, called neutrinos, change from one type to another while traveling from the sun to the Earth. The SNO experiment also confirmed that neutrinos have a tiny, but nonzero mass. McDonald is the former Gordon and Patricia Gray Chair in Particle Astrophysics at Queen's University in Kingston. As Professor Emeritus, he is still active in research on dark matter and neutrinos at the SNOLAB underground laboratory. Professor McDonald has received numerous awards for his research, including the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics, alongside researcher Yoji Totsuka (2007), the Henry Marshall Tory Medal from the Royal Society of Canada (2011), and the Nobel Prize in Physics (2015). He was named an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2007, and Companion of the Order of Canada in 2016. he is a member of the Order of Ontario, as well as the Royal Societies of both Canada and the UK.
Talks by Arthur B. McDonald
-
Panel Session: Luck vs Grit
-
Asimina Arvanitaki Perimeter Institute
-
Arthur B. McDonald Queen's University
- Katie Mack
PIRSA:22100068 -
-
Special Guest Talk - 'Science Opportunities Underground: Neutrinos and Dark Matter'
Arthur B. McDonald Queen's University
PIRSA:22100064 -
SNO and the New SNOLAB Underground Facility
Arthur B. McDonald Queen's University
-
PSI Graduation - 2013
-
John Berlinsky McMaster University
-
Brian McNamara University of Waterloo
-
Arthur B. McDonald Queen's University
PIRSA:13060023 -
-