Caterina Doglioni

Caterina Doglioni

Caterina Doglioni is a post-doctoral researcher in the ATLAS group of the University of Geneva. She got her taste for calorimeters with the Rome Sapienza group in the commissioning of the ECAL at the CMS experiment during her Master's thesis. She continued her PhD work with the University of Oxford and moved to hadronic calorimeters: she worked on calibrating and measuring hadronic jets with the first ATLAS data. She is still using jets to search for new physics phenomena, while thinking about calorimeters at a new future hadron collider.

Searching for Dark Matter with the ATLAS detector

When we look around us, at all the things we can touch and see all of this is visible matter. And yet, this makes up less than 5% of the universe.

5 March 2019

Moriond Electroweak: physics, skiing and Italian food

If you’re a young physicist working in high energy physics, you realize very soon in your career that “going for Moriond” and “going to Moriond” are two different things, and that neither of the two means that you’re actually going to Moriond. This year’s “Moriond Electroweak” was held in the Italian mountain resort of La Thuile, and had a special significance.

30 March 2015

LHCPlanning for the future

As someone who comes from a small mountain town, for many years I've linked the word 'summer' to 'seaside' and 'sun'. During my experience as a physicist working in ATLAS, I found myself associating the word 'conferences' to the word 'summer' more often than to the two above.

16 June 2014