UEC Nominee for 2022-2024 Term: Joshua Barrow

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Joshua Barrow
Massachusetts Institute of Technolocy & Tel Aviv University

Statement

I am currently a joint postdoctoral associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a fellow at Tel Aviv University, and am supported as a Zuckerman Postdoctoral Scholar. Today, I focus my work on an R&D online triggering project within the MicroBooNE experiment, along with neutrino cross sections, and sterile oscillations. I am a contributor to the GENIE event generator and a member of the Electrons-for-Neutrinos (e4nu) Initiative. I first visited Fermilab in 2019 as a graduate student from the University of Tennessee under the support of the DOE Office of Graduate Student Research fellowship program, focusing for a year on DUNE’s potential to observe rare intranuclear processes such as neutron-antineutron transformations and proton decay despite their associated atmospheric neutrino backgrounds. During this time, I also began a project on implementing precision electron scattering theory outputs into the GENIE event generator. This work continued through 2020 with support of the Universities Research Association.

Over these two years, I became a regular of the Users Center, and flourished both socially and intellectually from our substantially nourishing, open, culturally vibrant, global, inclusive, socially “flattened” community. Regaining and maintaining this dynamic and engaging social-scientific structure is of key importance for our community in the period we find ourselves in “following” the pandemic; my own professional success-thus-far would be nothing without it. Each of my projects was incalculably dependent upon input and collaboration from Fermilab graduate students, postdocs, and scientists, all users, each making me feel more and more incredibly welcome within our stimulating community. These projects formed the foundation of my dissertation work, and so I owe Fermilab and its users more than I can fathom. I hope I can help pay back that debt in part by serving as a representative for our users by advocating for and actively facilitating the same social-scientific benefits I enjoyed as a graduate student and continue to enjoy as a postdoc. Now that much of lab-wide life has returned to a “new normal”, I hope to continue to contribute to the restarting of our quintessential culture.

I have garnered some significant organizational and leadership experience through the APS DPF Snowmass 2021 Community Planning Process as a member and leader within Snowmass Early Career and as a liaison to the Rare Processes and Precision Measurements Frontier. I was also a coleader of the Snowmass 2021 Community Survey. Through the network I made while at Fermilab, I also helped lead and co-organize both the successful Theoretical Innovations for Future Experiments Regarding Baryon Number Violation, a Snowmass-official workshop, and the NuSTEC Workshop on Electron Scattering. I hope to bring this experience from within Snowmass Early Career and the Snowmass Community Survey to the UEC, and hope to be a fierce advocate for the lab and its users within projects highlighted by Snowmass and issues ripe for solution within the Survey.

I want to thank those who saw me as a good fit for this seat; I appreciate your faith in me—it truly is a privilege. Becoming a part of the UEC and helping to mold current and future Users’ experiences of Fermilab during these continuingly difficult times is a tall order, but one which I hope to take on. I believe we can at least partially rebuild and maintain a large part of our collective community’s nourishing, inclusive, and open character for the next generation of students, postdocs, and scientists with enough work and engagement, and I hope to help make this a reality