Schwitters was a researcher involved with the MIT Laboratory for Nuclear Science's Moby Dick project at the Cambridge Electron Accelerator in the late 1960s. An early major accomplishment in Schwitters' career was to oversee the design and construction of the Cylindrical Wire Spark Chambers of the
Mark I (detector) experiment, which operated at the
interaction point of the
SPEAR collider at the Stanford
SLAC Laboratory from 1973 to 1977, and major involvement in the analysis and interpretation of the data that resulted in the discovery of the particle (which resulted in the
Nobel Prize for
Burton Richter in 1976). A description of the discovery of the particle and his key role in this discovery is given by this article/talk from Burton Richter. In a 2021 interview, he speculated that, had the project been completed, it would have led to the discovery of the
Higgs boson particle in Waxahachie 10 years before its eventual discovery at
CERN's Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland and attracted an equivalent number of visitors to CERN's 120,000 per year. Beginning 2004, Schwitters led the University of Texas Maya Muon Tomography research team. From 2005 to 2011, he was the chair of the
JASON Defense Advisory Group. Schwitters died at the age of 78 due to cancer, in
Orcas Island, Washington. == Awards and honors ==