CURRICULUM VITAE:

Valentin E. Kuznetsov, 27 year old, married

Addresses:
Fermilab, P.O. Box 500,
M.S. 352, Batavia, IL,
60510, USA.
Fax: +1-630-840-8886
Tel: +1-630-840-2192

Background:

1999 (June) - present:
post-doctoral position at Univ. of California, Riverside.

1999 (May):
Ph.D. in particle and nuclear physics, Dubna, JINR.

1998 (Jan.) - 1999 (Feb,):
Scientific Associate (CERN),
European Laboratory for Particle Physics
Geneva, Switzerland.

1993-1998 (Jan.):
Junior Scientific Associate of the
Laboratory of Nuclear Problem in
Joint Institute for Nuclear Research.

1993 (June-Dec.):
Junior Scientific Associate of the
Laboratory of Theoretical Physics,
Institute of Applied Physics of
Irkutsk State University.

1993:
Graduated from the Theoretical Physics Department of
Irkutsk State University with honors.
Diploma work: ``Neutrino oscillations in matter and topological phases".


Research experience in experimental physics:

1999 (June) - present: D0 experiment at FNAL.

Current interests are:
Global tracking
Reconstruction in SMT (silicon tracker)
Vertex Reconstruction
I invite you to visit my FNAL web-page for other details.

Run II data is coming March 2001, No paper yet.

My talk given on interview, Univ. California Riverside.

1997 - 1999 (Feb.): NOMAD-STAR experiment at CERN.

I was participating in the NOMAD-STAR experiment at CERN SPS. It is a prototype of the silicon vertex detector for an upgrade of NOMAD detector. I have taken a leading role in the software development group, suggested the structure of the off-line reconstruction program. I investigated and implemented the Kalman filter for a parabola track model (since NOMAD-STAR can only measure two coordinates). Rely on NOMAD event display I have prepared the own event display for NOMAD-STAR detector. I have been involved in the GEANT MC simulation of the silicon detectors, data decoding and on-line of the NOMAD-STAR. I was responsible for support of off-line software, data taking and production of NOMAD-STAR experiment.

Data was taking 1997/98,
4 published articles, see References.
6th International Conference on Advanced Technology and Particle Physics, October 1998, Como talk

1995 - 1999 (Jan.): NOMAD experiment at CERN SPS (WA-96).

I was working in NOMAD (WA-96) experiment at CERN SPS which was searching for nu_mu->nu_tau neutrino oscillations.
I was involved in the following analysis:
D^*_s production in NOMAD (measurement of different branching ratios).
Dilepton production (mu^-mu^+, mu^-+e^+-).
Charm search.
Investigation of electromagnetic properties of neutrino. (it was a part of my Ph.D. thesis).
I developed a MC (GEANT/LEPTO/JETSET) simulation program for study of the dilepton production of neutrino scattering in Coulomb field of nuclei.

Data was taking 1995/98,
11 published articles, see References.

1997-1998: TOSCA proposal

I have participated in the TOSCA collaboration. The TOSCA is being designed as a high sensitivity neutrino oscillation detector. One of the features of this design is to use silicon detectors to locate the position of particles in the nuclear emulsion target.

1 published preprint.

1999 (June) - present: Neutrino Detector, IHEP-JINR collaboration.

I was participated in the ND (Neutrino Detector) experiment, Protvino, Russia, which was searching for nu_mu->nu_x neutrino oscillations and was sensitive to the mass difference squared Delta m^2 > 100 eV^2. I was involved in investigation of xF_3, xF_2 Structure Functions and Cross Llewellyn Smith Sum Rule.

Data was taking 19xx,
2 published articles, see References.


Research experience in theoretical physics:

1993 - 1999: Toroid Dipole Moment Neutrino.

Studying the toroid form factor of neutrino. One-loop calculations of toroid moment of neutrino. Transition radiation of neutrinos. Study of various applications and investigation of experimental observations of toroid dipole moment of neutrino.

6 published articles. see References.

1991 - 1995: Berry's phases for neutrino physics.

Developing mathematical formalism for studying three-neutrino oscillations in inhomogeneous and absorbing media, based on the Berry's adiabatic approach. Applying existence formalism for three-level non-Hermitian systems.

2 published articles. see References.


Software development and management:

1997 - 1999: For NOMAD-STAR group

I am the head of the software development group for NOMAD-STAR (Silicon TARget) experiment. I am developing the off-line and on-line software, data decoding and reconstruction program. [see, NOMAD Reconstruction Software: Si-package v8r2]. The main part of Si-package is the reconstruction program. It is based on object-oriented approach describing physics conceptions, for instance (hit, track, etc.), as an different objects. More than 16k lines of the code were written in C, using Ci interpreter and OnX (motif based graphical package) for interactive event display. The Tcl/Tk was used for installation procedure and C<->FORTRAN interface for matching between different softwares.

I developed a two-dimensional Kalman filter which is the main part of the tracking program.

Using script languages such as csh, awk, sed and CERN tools, I organized the automatic production for NOMAD-STAR experiment (staging tapes, data reading and reconstruction).

for more information see here.

1994 - 1999: For NOMAD experiment.

I orginized the transfer and support of NOMAD software to JINR (automatic update, common Makefiles and user environment).

I participated in organization of the local cluster based on PC/Linux in CERN and JINR (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research).

I participated in porting of NOMAD software from DEC/OSF1 to PC-Linux.

I was involved in development of NOMAD reconstruction program.

I was involved in testing of the NOMAD software on different platforms (DEC/OSF1, Solaris, SunOS, PC-Linux)

1992 - 1994: Theoretical investigations.

I developed a Monte Carlo program (GEANT, LEPTO, JETSET) for study of the dilepton production of neutrino scattering in Coulomb field of nuclei. [NOMAD-MEMO # 96-001].


Recomendations:

Prof. Juan Jose Gomez Cadenas,
Universidad de Valencia,
Depto Fisica Atomica y Nuclear,
Facultad de Ciencias Fisicas.
Campus Ciencias. Dr. Roliner, 50
Burjassot, Spain.

European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN),
EP Division, CH-1211 Geneve 23, Switzerland.
gomez@axnd02.cern.ch

Dr. Luigi Di Lella
European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN),
EP Division, CH-1211 Geneve 23, Switzerland.
Luigi.Di.Lella@cern.ch

Dr. Leslie Loris Camilleri
European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN),
EP Division, CH-1211 Geneve 23, Switzerland.
Leslie.Camilleri@cern.ch

Dr. Lucie Linssen
European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN),
EP Division, CH-1211 Geneve 23, Switzerland.
Lucie.Linssen@cern.ch

Dr. Eduardo Do Couto E Silva
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC)
P.O. Box 4349, MS 98, Stanford, CA, 94309, USA
dudu@leland.Stanford.EDU

Dr. Vadim Alexandrovich Naumov,
Laboratory of Theoretical Physics,
Irkutsk State University, Irkutsk 664003, Russia.
naumov@dnp155.jinr.ru