Philip Clark
Professor P J Clark
- Position
- Professor
- Category
- Academic staff
- Location
-
James Clerk Maxwell Building (JCMB)
Room 3421
- Email: P.Clark [at] ed.ac.uk
- Tel: +44 (0)131 650 5231
- Personal home page
- Edinburgh Research Explorer profile
Philip is a member of the following School research institute, research group and research area:
Research institute
Research group
Research area
Research interests
Prof Clark's research interests are the major unsolved questions in particle physics: the properties of the recently discovered Higgs boson and the nature of the fundamental particle mass generation mechanism.
CP violation (matter-antimatter asymmetry) and understanding the rare decays of particles created in particle accelerator collisions, are additional long-term interests.
He is interested in new computer architectures, particularly the advent of many-core and GPGPU (General-Purpose Computation on Graphics Processing Units) devices.
Previously he led the Edinburgh GridPP (Computing Grid for Particle Physics) effort and was Chairman of the ScotGrid Tier-2 compute and data centre.
He created the University’s research programme in the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva, where he currently holds a CERN associateship.
Introduction to Java Programming (MSc)
Research Methods: Introduction to Maple (3rd & 4th year)
Physics 2A: Forces, Fields & Potentials (2nd year)
- Physics 1B: Nuclear, Particle and Astrophysics (1st year)
Philip currently offers the following PhD project opportunities:
Philip has featured in the following recent School news stories:
Recent publications
- Search for the Higgs boson decay to a boson and a photon in collisions at √ = 13 TeV and 13.6 TeV with the ATLAS detector DOI, Physics Letters B, 876, p. 1-21
- Electroweak diboson production in association with a high-mass dijet system in semileptonic final states from pp collisions at √s=13 TeV with the ATLAS detector DOI, The European Physical Journal C, 86, p. 1-43
- Search for signatures of electroweakinos with photons, jets, and large missing transverse momentum in √s = 13 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector DOI, Journal of High Energy Physics, 2026, p. 1-46
- Measurement of the top-quark mass using decays with a J/ψ meson at √s =13 TeV with the ATLAS detector DOI, Journal of High Energy Physics, 2026, p. 1-52
