Tag: Scientists

  • Relive 2021 at CERN

    Relive 2021 at CERN

    Highlights of the year at CERN, from exciting particle physics results to accelerator milestones and much more

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  • CERN has a new Cultural Advisory Board

    CERN’s newly appointed Cultural Advisory Board will hold its first meeting

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  • Seeing Sparks!: CERN’s first serendipity forum on future intelligence

    Seeing Sparks!: CERN’s first serendipity forum on future intelligence

    The upcoming first edition of Sparks!, which will be held 17-18 September, adopts the theme of future intelligence

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  • CERN lays first stone of Science Gateway

    CERN lays first stone of Science Gateway

    Today, CERN held a first stone ceremony for Science Gateway, the Laboratory’s new flagship project for science education and outreach

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  • CERN approves new LHC experiment

    CERN approves new LHC experiment

    SND@LHC, or Scattering and Neutrino Detector at the LHC, will be the facility’s ninth experiment

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  • ALPHA cools antimatter using laser light for the first time

    ALPHA cools antimatter using laser light for the first time

    The result opens the door to considerably more precise studies of the internal structure of antihydrogen and of how it behaves under the influence of gravity

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  • Intriguing new result from the LHCb experiment at CERN

    Intriguing new result from the LHCb experiment at CERN

    The LHCb results strengthen hints of a violation of lepton flavour universality

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  • TOTEM and DØ  collaborations announce odderon discovery

    TOTEM and DØ collaborations announce odderon discovery

    The TOTEM collaboration at the LHC and the DØ collaboration at the Tevatron collider at Fermilab have discovered an elusive state of three gluons

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  • CLOUD at CERN reveals the role of iodine acids in atmospheric aerosol formation

    CLOUD at CERN reveals the role of iodine acids in atmospheric aerosol formation

    The results suggest a new mechanism that could accelerate the loss of Arctic sea ice

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  • Potassium nucleus loses some of its magic

    Potassium nucleus loses some of its magic

    A new study at ISOLDE finds no signature of a “magic” number of neutrons in potassium-51, challenging the proposed magic nature of nuclei with 32 neutrons

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