Professor Eliezer Rabinovici elected as next President of the CERN Council
Monday 27 September 2021

Professor Eliezer Rabinovici 24th President of the CERN Council (Image: CERN)
Geneva,
24 September 2021. The CERN Council has today announced the election of
Professor Eliezer Rabinovici as its 24th President, for a period of one
year, renewable twice, with a mandate starting on 1 January 2022. He
will be taking over from Dr Ursula Bassler, who concludes her three-year
term at the end of December 2021. “Professor Rabinovici is a
brilliant theorist in the most advanced fields of research. 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,” said Dr Bassler. Professor Rabinovici is
currently professor at the Racah Institute of Physics of the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem and the Louis Michel visiting chair at the
Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques (IHES). He received his PhD in
high-energy physics at the Weizmann Institute of Science in 1974. In the
following years, he worked as a research associate at Fermilab and at
Lawrence Berkeley Radiation Laboratory, before returning to Israel and
the Hebrew University as a senior lecturer in 1977, where he served as
Director from 2005 to 2012. Professor Rabinovici’s main field
of research is theoretical high-energy physics and, 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. Throughout his career, he has held positions within
several councils and committees, such as member of the HEP-EPS Board
(from 1996 to 2011), Chair of the Israeli Committee for SESAME (since
1997) and Chair of the Israeli High-Energy Committee (from 2004 to
2020). In 2004, he was appointed as one of Israel’s delegates to the
CERN Council, where he served as Vice President from 2016 to 2018. “CERN
is a special place where science and collaboration meet to answer some
of the most fundamental questions about the world we live in. 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. I am honoured that the
Council chose me as their next President, and thankful that I get the
opportunity to serve CERN’s scientific community, Member States and
Associate Member States,” said Professor Rabinovici.
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