Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israeli professor elected president of CERN Council

A Hebrew University professor will become head of Geneva-based CERN, the largest nuclear particle research center in the world.

Eliezer Rabinovici. Credit: CERN.
Eliezer Rabinovici. Credit: CERN.

The CERN Council, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, announced the election of Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HU) physicist Professor Eliezer Rabinovici as its 24th president.

“Professor Rabinovici is a brilliant theorist in the most advanced fields of research,” said current CERN Council President Dr. Ursula Bassler, who will step down at the end of 2021, according to an (HU) statement.

“During my presidency, I very often had the occasion to exchange with Professor Rabinovici, whose advice and contributions have always been very helpful to steer the ongoing discussions. I am confident that the Council is welcoming an excellent President, whose concern for science is of the utmost importance,” she said.

Professor Rabinovici’s main research field is theoretical high-energy physics, in particular, quantum field theory and string theory.

“He has made major contributions to the understanding of the phase structure of gauge theories, which are the building blocks of the Standard Model, and the uncovering of the phases of gravity,” the university said.

Based in Geneva, Switzerland, CERN is the largest nuclear particle research center in the world.

“CERN is a special place where science and collaboration meet to answer some of the most fundamental questions about the world we live in,” Rabinovici said, according to HU.

“Throughout my 16 years as a member of the CERN Council, I have, time after time, been captivated by the commitment, collaboration and knowledge of people who work together towards the same mission,” he said.

Professor Rabinovici is currently a professor at HU’s Racah Institute of Physics and the Louis Michel visiting chair at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques (IHES), HU said.

He received his Ph.D. in high-energy physics at the Weizmann Institute of Science in 1974, worked at Fermilab and at Lawrence Berkeley Radiation Laboratory.

In 1977, Rabinovici returned to Israel and HU as a senior lecturer. He served as Racah’s Director from 2005 to 2012.

The Israeli prime minister has called the Hungarian leader a “warm” supporter of the Jewish state.
Pundits can claim that Iran and its terror proxies have won a war, even if it has no grounding in reality. If this is what Hamas, Hezbollah and Tehran consider a victory, then they should continue winning this way for the next 100 years.
Jerusalem judges approve postponing the prime minister’s testimony.
Lebanon’s official news agency on Sunday described “violent clashes” in the city amid Israeli artillery shelling.
The announcement follows collapse of talks with Iran and puts fragile ceasefire at risk.
Jerusalem blamed “systemic incitement” by Sanchez government following the Easter display; Easter act was local tradition, not antisemitic, according to local mayor.