Kate Scholberg
Kate Scholberg is a Canadian and American neutrino physicist whose research has included experimental studies of neutrino oscillation, coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering and the detection of supernovae. She is currently the Arts & Sciences Distinguished Professor of Physics and Bass Fellow at Duke University.
Education and career
As a child in Canada, Scholberg was interested in astronomy from a young age, but as a teenager she became interested in chemistry and entered college planning to become a chemist. However, after a bad experience in an organic chemistry course, she changed her focus to physics. She graduated with a B.Sc. from McGill University in 1989, and completed her M.S. and Ph.D. at the California Institute of Technology in 1996, under the joint supervision of Charles W. Peck and Barry Barish. Her interest in neutrino physics developed out of her graduate work; thesis titled "". The MACRO experiment was originally designed to search for magnetic monopoles, at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy.After postdoctoral research at Boston University, and a junior faculty position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, she moved to Duke University in 2004. Before becoming Arts & Sciences Distinguished Professor of Physics at Duke, she was the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Physics there.