
| James H. Buckley |
| Media Assistance:
Susan Killenberg McGinn Exec. Dir. of Danforth Campus Communications smcginn@wustl.edu (314) 935-5254 |
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He is playing a leading role in a major international collaboration and is a member of the multi-institution Whipple Observatory Collaboration, dedicated to ground-based studies of celestial objects that shine brightly in gamma rays of very high energies.
A founding member of the VERITAS project, the successor to Whipple, Buckley is the astrophysicist responsible for the essential technological breakthrough — Flash-Analog-to-Digital Converter — that gives VERITAS the edge over new gamma-ray telescopes around the world.
Working closely with Daniel J. Leopold, Ph.D., research associate professor in physics, Buckley is developing a new class of solid-state detectors for high-efficiency detection of very low levels of optical and ultraviolet light.
The improved detectors are expected to have significant applications in experimental physics as well as biomedical research.
In another project, Buckley has worked with a team to construct the Antipodal Transient Observatory. Two 0.5-meter optical telescopes are situated on opposite sides of the Earth, one in the Himalayas and the other in Arizona.
For the first time, these telescopes enable nearly continuous monitoring of gamma-ray sources that are visible in the spectrum. From these, correlations can be established.
He also has had a central role in observations of a subspecies of active galaxies that led to the discovery of markarian 501 and other sources of TeV gamma rays,
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