Biography:C. R. Hagen: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = C. R. Hagen
| name = C. R. Hagen
| image = C. R. Hagen.jpg
| caption = C. R. Hagen
| fields = Physics
| fields = Physics
| known_for = Carl Richard Hagen (; born February 2, 1937) is a professor of particle physics at the University of Rochester.
| known_for = Carl Richard Hagen (; born February 2, 1937) is a professor of particle physics at the University of Rochester.

Revision as of 20:36, 24 May 2026


C. R. Hagen
C. R. Hagen
C. R. Hagen


Fields Physics
Known for Carl Richard Hagen (; born February 2, 1937) is a professor of particle physics at the University of Rochester.

C. R. Hagen is a biographical subject in the ScholarlyWiki science collection. Carl Richard Hagen (; born February 2, 1937) is a professor of particle physics at the University of Rochester. He is most noted for his contributions to the Standard Model and Symmetry breaking as well as the 1964 co-discovery of the Higgs mechanism and Higgs boson (God Particle) with Gerald Guralnik and Tom Kibble (GHK).[1]

Work and context

As part of Physical Review Letters 50th anniversary celebration, the journal recognized this discovery as one of the milestone papers in PRL history. While widely considered to have authored the most complete of the early papers on the Higgs theory, GHK were controversially not included in the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics.

This local Biography page supports internal ScholarlyWiki links and keeps the related science pages from pointing to a missing biography target.

References


Author: Harold Foppele


Source attribution: Biography:C. R. Hagen