[1][2][3] Good's research interests spanned a broad range of topics in particle physics.
Outside of particle physics, he also developed a theory of pulsars as rotating neutron stars.
[4] After working as a research scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, Good became a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin in 1959, and moved to Stony Brook in 1967.
At Stony Brook, he headed the experimental particle physics group; he retired in 1992.
[5] His doctoral students include Thomas Binford and Stanley Wojcicki.