Myers earned a bachelor's degree in electrical and electronic engineering in 1968 from
Queen's University, Belfast, and completed his Ph.D. there in 1972. Thereafter he worked at
CERN. He co-led the commissioning and performance of the Large Electron Positron Collider (LEP) and later was appointed project leader for the LEP-2 energy upgrade. Following the LHC technical failure in September 2008, he was appointed CERN Director of Accelerators and Technology (2009-2014) and in this capacity directed the post-accident repair of the LHC and the accelerator performance until 2014. In 2012 the LHC experiments ATLAS and CMS announced the discovery of the Higgs' boson. In 2014, he was appointed Head of CERN Medical Applications. and of the
Royal Irish Academy in 2015. He was awarded the
Duddell Medal and Prize of the
Institute of Physics in 2003. In 2010 he was awarded the International Particle Accelerators Lifetime Achievement Prize "for his numerous outstanding contributions to the design, construction, commissioning, performance optimization, and upgrade of energy-frontier colliders - in particular ISR, LEP, and LHC - and to the wider development of accelerator science". With two other CERN directors he was jointly awarded the EPS Edison Volta Prize in 2012. He became an Officer of the
Order of the British Empire in 2013. ==External links==