Richard E. Taylor (born November 2, 1929, Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada—died February 22, 2018, Stanford, California, U.S.) was a Canadian physicist who in 1990 shared the Nobel Prize for Physics with Jerome Friedman and Henry Kendall for his collaboration in proving the existence of quarks, which are now generally accepted as being among the basic building blocks of matter.
Taylor attended the University of Alberta, where he received a bachelor’s degree (1950) and a master’s degree (1952). He received a doctorate from Stanford University in 1962. Taylor worked for a year at the University of California’s Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory before joining (1962) the faulty at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), where he became full professor in 1970 and professor emeritus in 2003.
While at SLAC, he and Friedman and Kendall conducted the series of experiments that confirmed the hypothesis that protons and neutrons are made up of quarks. This discovery was crucial to the formulation of the currently accepted theoretical description of matter and its interactions, known as the standard model.