During her studies at the University of Heidelberg, Baudis worked on double beta decay and the detection of Weakly interacting massive particles. In particular, she investigated how neutrinoless double-beta decay could be used in the search for dark matter. She participated in the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search, a collaboration that aimed to detect dark matter in the form of WIMPs. Since 2004, she has contributed to the XENON dark matter research project, which uses a chamber filled with liquid xenon to detect particle interactions. As part of the XENON project, she studied the technical limitations of current detection methods, with an emphasis on improving the sensitivity of direct dark matter detectors . These efforts were continued in the DARWIN project, which involves research and development on WIMP detectors. Like XENON, the DARWIN project aims to increase the sensitivity of liquid xenon detectors until they have a realistic chance of detecting and studying dark matter.
Awards and positions
From 1997 until 1999, Baudis held a fellowship of the research training group at the University of Heidelberg for "Experimental methods in nuclear and particle physics". In 2005, she received the NSF Career Award. In 2006, she was awarded a Lichtenberg Professorship by the Volkswagen foundation. In 2013, she was offered a Canada Excellence Research Chair at Queens University, which she declined. The American Physical Society named her a Fellow in 2015 "for leadership and outstanding contributions to experimental searches for astrophysical dark matter by direct detection and for double beta decay". In 2017, Baudis received an Advanced Grant from the European Research Council for her project concerning a multi-ton xenon observatory for particle astrophysics. The Advanced Grant supported Baudis's project with over 3 million euros. Since 2019, she has held a Visiting Miller Professorship at the University of California, Berkeley. Baudis is a member of the CERN Science Policy Committee and Editor-in-chief of the European Physical Journal C. She is a member of the KIT Center for Elementary Particle and Astroparticle Physics advisory board, the Astroparticle Physics European Consortium's scientific advisory committee, and was on the scientific advisory committee of the Technical University of Munich's Excellence Cluster. She has been a co-spokesperson for the XENON Experiment, and is the founder and spokesperson of the DARWIN project and was on the University of Zurich's Graduate Campus Board.