Mohamed Elashri is a PhD candidate in elementary particle physics at the University of Cincinnati working on the LHCb experiment at CERN, where he investigates long-lived kink-tracked particles and contributes to the Allen trigger system. With nine years of experience across high-energy experiments (NOvA, CMS studies) and teaching, he blends deep detector and analysis expertise with real-time systems engineering. He is exploring GPU-accelerated event processing to push trigger performance toward online reconstruction, a practical skill set that bridges research and production-grade computing. Based in Cincinnati, Mohamed combines a strong experimental pedigree—from improving silicon trackers in his undergraduate work to searching for magnetic monopoles during his master's—with a clear focus on delivering efficient, high-throughput solutions for modern particle physics.
9 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Elementary Particle Physics, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Elementary Particle Physics at University of Cincinnati
Bachelor of Physics, High-Energy Physics, Bachelor of Physics, High-Energy Physics at Zewail City of Science and Technology
Master's degree, Elementary Particle Physics, Master's degree, Elementary Particle Physics at University of Minnesota Duluth
Contributions:1 review, 42 commits, 6 PRs in 1 year 3 months
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Mohamed Elashri - Doctoral Student at University of Cincinnati