Particle beams are once again zooming around the Large Hadron Collider-located at the CERN laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland.
Fermilab is seeking local citizens to participate in planning and developing the laboratory’s future. Nominate a local community member or yourself to serve on Fermilab’s new Community Advisory Board.
Fermilab has created a new Web site to provide citizens with clear and accurate information about how Fermilab is using funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Read more to find out about the immediate benefits for our neighbors and our nation.
If you buy a Butterball turkey this Thanksgiving, you have particle accelerators to thank for its freshness. For decades now the food industry has used particle accelerators to produce the sturdy, heat-shrinkable film that Butterballs come wrapped in.
Fermilab Today—November 13, 2009
Wire contracts placed for high-field magnet projectFermilab has placed contracts for the first orders of a superconducting wire scientists hope to use in the next generation of high-performance magnets.
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Fermilab Today—November 4, 2009
NOvA gets full construction approvalNOvA experiment collaborators have more to celebrate this holiday season.
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Fermilab Today—October 30, 2009
Roll out the wavelength shifter barrelThe first batches of two powdered chemicals, dubbed wavelength shifters, for the future NOvA neutrino project arrived by the barrel at Fermilab recently.
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Read more about Fermilab and the Recovery Act
The U.S. has contributed $531 million to the construction of the Large Hadron Collider, the world's largest particle collider, located in Europe. From the LHC Remote Operations Center at Fermilab, U.S. scientists will participate in the startup of the machine.
More than 900 scientists from the U.S. work on the CMS experiment at the LHC. Sifting through proton-proton collisions, scientists may find signs for dark matter particles, new subatomic forces and perhaps extra dimensions of space.
Fermilab has moved a step closer to constructing a new neutrino experiment. The Department of Energy has given Critical Decision-0 approval to a new booster neutrino experiment called MicroBooNE.
Scientists wonder why the universe is expanding ever faster. What mysterious force is at work? By recording the light from hundreds of millions of galaxies, they hope to find out what's going on.
An experiment that could help revamp the Intensity Frontier recently took a big step forward. ArgoNeuT recorded its first neutrino interactions, the first ever seen in a liquid-argon detector in the United States.
Data recorded by the Pierre Auger Observatory raises the possibility that the highest-energy cosmic rays - super-speedy cosmic bullets that hit Earth - could actually be iron nuclei.
Scientists of Fermilab's CDF and DZero collaborations observed particle collisions that produce single top quarks, a discovery significant in the Higgs boson search.
Project X would allow for numerous experiments at the intensity frontier and would allow scientists to develop technologies for a future machine at the energy frontier.
A muon collider would allow for a new generation of experiments at the energy frontier.
The Particle Physics Project Prioritzation Panel proposes a strategic plan for the next 10 years to address the central questions in particle physics using a range of tools and techniques at three interrelated frontiers.
Learn how Fermilab is paving the way for the next particle physics discovery.
At Fermilab’s Tevatron Collider, physicists have been telling the story of their research results in weekly installments for more than five years.