A Strong Case for Weak Interactions
BYLINE: Michelle Alvarez
For Immediate Release_
March 23, 2026
Contact: Michelle Alvarez
malvarez@jlab.org
A Strong Case for Weak Interactions
Jefferson Lab physicist Ciprian Gal wins prestigious DOE award to search for cracks in physics’ best theory of the universe
Newswise — NEWPORT NEWS, VA – In fifth grade, Ciprian Gal received his physics textbook a year early. The book promised to explain everything, and young Gal believed it. “I was bragging to all my friends, look at this book. It tells you everything,” Gal said. “And I’m going to know everything about it.” Decades later, Gal, a staff scientist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, is still chasing answers. His work probing the fundamental forces that hold matter together earned him a DOE Office of Science Early Career Research Award. The five-year, $2.75 million award will fund personnel and research expenses related to Gal’s work on the Measurement of a Lepton-Lepton Electroweak Reaction (MOLLER) experiment. MOLLER aims to test whether the Standard Model of Particle Physics, scientists’ current best description of how particles interact, is actually complete. Measuring Weak Charge The Standard Model explains three of the four fundamental forces that govern the universe: electromagnetism, the strong force and the weak force. Gal’s research focuses on the measurement of the electron’s weak charge, a property that describes how electrons interact through the weak force. While physicists understand the weak force reasonably well, measuring its precise effects on electrons requires extraordinary precision. The MOLLER experiment will scatter electrons off other electrons in a hydrogen target. It will measure tiny differences in how they scatter depending on the electron’s spin direction. These differences are so tiny, estimated to be 35 parts per billion, that measuring them requires utmost accuracy and control over every aspect of the experiment. “It’s a precision measurement,” Gal said. “We need to know exactly what we’re measuring, down to very fine details.” The challenge extends beyond just taking measurements. Gal and his team must account for every possible source of uncertainty, from the quantum mechanics of how particles scatter to the precise geometry of their detector. Abhay Deshpande, who mentored Gal during his graduate studies at Stony Brook University and now collaborates with him on MOLLER, attributes this precision mindset to Gal’s fundamental approach to physics. “His penchant for precision and methodical approach makes him particularly suited to this exacting research,” said Deshpande, Brookhaven National Laboratory’s associate lab director for nuclear and particle physics and Stony Brook University distinguished professor of physics. The new measurements could indicate new particles or forces that physicists haven’t discovered yet. These deviations could help answer some of physics’ biggest mysteries: Why is there more matter than antimatter in the universe? What is dark matter made of? “Whether we confirm the Standard Model’s predictions or find something unexpected, this measurement will be a major step forward,” Gal said. “Either result will teach us something fundamental about how the universe works.” A Decade of Physics at Jefferson Lab Gal’s connection to Jefferson Lab began in 2014, long before he joined the staff. Immediately after earning his Ph.D., he came to the lab as a University of Virginia (UVA) postdoc, drawn by the facility’s unique capabilities for studying the internal structure of protons and neutrons. Over the next eight years, Gal worked at the lab through partnerships with UVA, Stony Brook University and Mississippi State University. Each position as a research assistant professor helped him develop his skills in precision measurements and experimental design. In 2023, he joined Jefferson Lab as a staff scientist in Experimental Halls A/C. Throughout his career, Gal worked closely with mentors who shaped his approach to physics and collaboration. “At this point, Cip is one of the leading mid-career experts on all things relevant to the MOLLER experiment,” said Krishna Kumar, a University of Massachusetts, Amherst professor of physics and MOLLER spokesperson. “As we pivot to data collection and physics analysis, I expect he will be one of the leaders of the team driving the analysis to accomplish the goals of the experiment.” For Gal, that leadership potential stems directly from his commitment to teamwork. “The research that I want to do and the things that I want to discover can’t be done without collaboration, not only with experimental and theoretical physicists here at the lab, but also at the universities,” Gal said.
Looking Forward The DOE Office of Science Early Career Research Program, established in 2010, supports outstanding scientists at a DOE national laboratory or Office of Science user facility within 12 years of having earned their doctorate degree across disciplines including nuclear physics. The program aims to support the vision, creativity and effort of early career faculty to drive innovation in the basic science enterprise. For Gal, the award provides resources and time to tackle MOLLER’s technical challenges and prepare for the experiment’s data collection phase. “Cip is a fantastic collaborator,” said Kumar. “He communicates effectively regardless of the audience, and the fact that he acknowledges the need for collaboration demonstrates his maturity and potential for leadership.” Beyond the immediate research, Gal sees the award as validation of his approach: combining precision measurement techniques with innovative detector design to push the boundaries of what physics can reveal about nature’s fundamental workings. It also validates something simpler: persistence. “I think for these very competitive awards, it matters a lot to be able to stand out, to have something that is unique on its own,” Gal said. He applied in 2024, received feedback, refined his proposal, and won on his second attempt in 2025. “Ciprian thrives on difficult tasks,” said Deshpande. “He understands not only the award’s value to his own career but, more importantly, the visibility this recognition brings to the MOLLER project and Jefferson Lab. His persistence therefore does not surprise me, and I am delighted by his success.” For researchers working at the frontier of nuclear physics, success often means spending years preparing for measurements that take only hours or days to complete. The payoff comes when those measurements reveal something unexpected, a crack in our understanding that points toward deeper truths. Gal’s work on MOLLER continues that tradition, using precision as a tool to probe whether the Standard Model tells the whole story or whether the universe has more secrets waiting to be discovered. For a scientist who once believed a single book could explain everything, the possibility of discovering something entirely new might be even better than having all the answers.
Further Reading
https://moller-docdb.physics.sunysb.edu/cgi-bin/DocDBTest/public/ShowDocument?docid=998
https://journals.aps.org/prc/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevC.109.024323
https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.10267
Contact: Michelle Alvarez, Jefferson Lab Communications Office, malvarez@jlab.org
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