SLAC topics

Particle physics RSS feed

Working at the forefront of particle physics, SLAC scientists use powerful particle accelerators to create and study nature’s fundamental building blocks and forces, build sensitive detectors to search for new particles and develop theories that explain and guide experiments. SLAC's particle physicists want to understand our universe – from its smallest constituents to its largest structures.

Related links:
Physics of the universe
Elementary particle physics

Particles collide in this illustration

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VIA Symmetry Magazine

When Research Worlds Collide

Particle physicists and scientists from other disciplines are finding ways to help one another answer critical questions.

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VIA Symmetry Magazine

Forecasting the Future

Physicists and other scientists use the GEANT4 toolkit to identify problems before they occur.

Physicists and other scientists use the GEANT4 toolkit to identify problems before they occur.
News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

Open Access to the Universe

A team of scientists generated a giant cosmic simulation—and now they're giving it away.

News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

Science on Demand

Brian Greene welcomes the Internet to physics class with World Science U.

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Last year, a monster magnet set out from Brookhaven National Lab on an epic trek by land and sea to Fermilab, where it will...

Photo – The Muon g-2 Detector Group
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The Higgs boson could be the tool that leads scientists to the next big discovery.

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DOE-funded Program Benefits Companies, the Lab and Society

A copper acceleration cavity with an extremely thin coating of tungsten.
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Photon science, a spin-off of particle physics, has returned to its roots for help developing better, faster detectors.

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A determined volunteer gives an old detector new life as the centerpiece of a cosmic ray exhibit.

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Scientists from two experiments have banded together to create a single comprehensive record of their work for scientific posterity.

Man at podium with a big book
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Detecting new physics isn’t quite like detecting cat videos—yet.

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Two years after the groundbreaking discovery of the Higgs boson, physicists are still hard at work.