About me:
I was studying at Lanzhou University in China
for my Bachelor Degree in Theory Physics from 2001
to 2005. Then I went into Hampton
University as a graduate student in Experimental
Nuclear Physics(ENP) and started doing my research in Jefferson Lab
from 2006. My topic at HU was -- Spectroscopic investigation of Lambda
Hypernuclear in the wide mass region using the(e,e'K+) reaction
(E05-115, which was finised in 2009 in Hall C).
I moved to University
of Virginia at Summer 2010,
and continued to seek my Ph.D
degree in ENP. My thesis experiment in Hall A is -- Three-nucleon short range
correlations studies in inclusive scattering for 0.8
< Q^2 < 2.8 (GeV/c)^2, which is scheduled to
run on Spring 2011. Here is the link to my PhD Thesis
After obtaning my
Ph.D degree in December 2013, I started to work at
Duke University as a Postdoctoral Research
Associate. My main project is to develop a new
device in
Hall-A, SoLID,
for more than 5 approved experiments. The physics
topic I am concentrating on is the Nucleon
Transverse Momentum Distributions (TMDs) and Nucleon
Spin study via the Semi-Inclusive
Deep Inelastic Scattering (SIDIS). Meanwhile, I also
worked on preparing the new Hall-B expeirment, Proton Charged
Radius Expeirment
(PRad).
I also participated in the new SRC-Tritium experiment in
Hall-A. As the winner of 2014 JSA
Postdoc Research Award, I was building and testing a prototype
for designing a new scintillating fiber tracker (SFT).
For more info about me, please see my
CV.