
Elena Accomando, a distinguished collider phenomenologist, passed away on 7 January 2025.
Elena received her laurea in physics from the Sapienza University of Rome in 1993, followed by a PhD from the University of Torino in 1997. Her early career included postdoctoral positions at Texas A&M University and the Paul Scherrer Institute, as well as a staff position at the University of Torino. In 2009 she joined the University of Southampton as a lecturer, earning promotions to associate professor in 2018 and professor in 2022.
Elena’s research focused on the theory and phenomenology of particle physics at colliders, searching for new forces and exotic supersymmetric particles at the Large Hadron Collider. She explored a wide range of Beyond the Standard Model (BSM) scenarios at current and future colliders. Her work included studies of new gauge bosons such as the Z′, extra-dimensional models, and CP-violating effects in BSM frameworks, as well as dark-matter scattering on nuclei and quantum corrections to vector-boson scattering. She was also one of the authors of “WPHACT”, a Monte Carlo event generator developed for four-fermion physics at electron–positron colliders, which remains a valuable tool for precision studies. Elena investigated novel signatures in decays of the Higgs boson, aiming to uncover deviations from Standard Model expectations, and was known for connecting theory with experimental applications, proposing phenomenological strategies that were both realistic and impactful. She was well known as a research collaborator at CERN and other international institutions.
She authored the WPHACT Monte Carlo event generator that remains a valuable tool for precision studies
Elena played an integral role in shaping the academic community at Southampton and was greatly admired as a teacher. Her remarkable professional achievements were paralleled by strength and optimism in the face of adversity. Despite her long illness, she remained a positive presence, planning ahead for her work and her family. Her colleagues and students remember her as a brilliant scientist, an inspiring mentor and a warm and compassionate person. She will also be missed by her longstanding colleagues from the CMS collaboration at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.
Elena is survived by her devoted husband, Francesco, and their two daughters.