Blas Cabrera Navarro (original) (raw)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Physicist at Stanford University
For the exiled Spanish physicist in the first half of the 20th century, see Blas Cabrera Felipe.
Blas Cabrera Navarro (born September 21, 1946 in Paris, France) is a Stanley G. Wojcicki Professor of Physics at Stanford University best known for his experiment in search of magnetic monopoles.[1] He is the son of Spanish physicist Nicolás Cabrera and the grandson of Blas Cabrera Felipe, also a Spanish physicist.
Blas Cabrera received his B.S. from the University of Virginia in 1968 and in 1975 got his Ph.D. from Stanford University after defending his thesis The Use of Superconducting Shields for Generating Ultra Low Magnetic Field Regions and Several Related Experiments, under advisors William M. Fairbank and William O. Hamilton.
On the night of February 14, 1982, his detector recorded an event which had the perfect signature hypothesized for a magnetic monopole. After he published his discovery,[2] a number of similar detectors were built by various research groups, and Cabrera's laboratory itself received a large grant to build an improved detector.[_citation needed_] However, no similar event has been recorded since, and his research group has since dropped the search. He is now a leader of the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search experiment.
In 1995, Cabrera was elected as a fellow of the American Physical Society.[3]
- ^ "Blas Cabrera". Stanford University. Retrieved 2019-09-07.
- ^ Blas Cabrera (1982-05-17). "First Results from a Superconductive Detector for Moving Magnetic Monopoles". Physical Review Letters. 48 (20). American Physical Society: 1378–1381. Bibcode:1982PhRvL..48.1378C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.48.1378. S2CID 17169500.
- ^ 1995 APS Fellows American Physical Society. Retrieved 2019-09-07.