Fair, constructive, and always motivating.
Xiang Liu is a prominent physicist and academic leader at Lanzhou University, where he serves as Vice President and Dean of the School of Physical Science and Technology since February 2022. Born in 1978 in Ji'an, Jiangxi Province, he obtained his bachelor's degree in Physics from Gannan Normal University (now Gannan Normal University) between 1996 and 2000. He then pursued advanced studies at Nankai University, earning both his master's and PhD degrees in Theoretical Physics in 2006. Immediately following his doctoral graduation, Liu conducted postdoctoral research at the School of Physics, Peking University, from 2006 to 2008. He joined Lanzhou University as a faculty member and has risen to hold prestigious titles such as Chuoying Distinguished Professor (Level II) and recipient of the State Council Special Allowance. Liu also serves as an adjunct PhD supervisor at the Institute of Modern Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and is a member of the Ninth Council of the High Energy Physics Division of the Chinese Physical Society.
Professor Liu's research focuses on high-energy physics phenomenology, with particular emphasis on non-perturbative issues in quantum chromodynamics and hadron physics. His theoretical work has provided crucial guidance for major high-energy physics experiments worldwide, including BES at BEPC in Beijing, BaBar at SLAC in the USA, Belle at KEK in Japan, CDF and D0 at Fermilab in the USA, LHCb, and COMPASS. Over his career, he has published more than 180 research papers in leading international journals, with over 110 appearing in the Physical Review series by the American Physical Society. Notable review articles include those in Physics Reports, Reports on Progress in Physics, and Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics. Key publications encompass 'The hidden-charm pentaquark and tetraquark states' (2016), 'A review of the open charm and open bottom systems' (2017), 'Decoding the X(5568) as a fully open-flavor su\bar{b}\bar{d} tetraquark state' (2016), 'Towards exotic hidden-charm pentaquarks in QCD' (2015), and 'Identifying exotic hidden-charm pentaquarks' (2015). His contributions have earned him significant recognition, including the National Natural Science Funds for Distinguished Young Scholars (2018), the 15th China Youth Science and Technology Award, the First Prize of the Ministry of Education for Natural Science (as first completer), the Fourth 'Morning Light Cup' Youth Excellent Paper First Prize from the High Energy Physics Society, and the 2021 Gansu Province Graduate Education Excellent Supervisor Award. Liu recruits PhD students in theoretical physics, particle physics, and nuclear physics, fostering the next generation of researchers in these fields.