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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.

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Physics of the universe
Elementary particle physics

Particles collide in this illustration

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VIA Symmetry Magazine

Deep Learning Takes on Physics

Can the same type of technology Facebook uses to recognize faces also recognize particles?

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Four physicists discuss Higgs boson research since the discovery.

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VIA Symmetry Magazine

What to Do with the Data?

Physicists and scientific computing experts prepare for an onslaught of petabytes.

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VIA Symmetry Magazine

It Came From the Physics Lab

Settle in for a physics-themed Halloween movie marathon.

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The fellowship will support their research into developing new methods of imaging tiny particles and understanding the properties of the Higgs boson.

Tais Gorkhover and Michael Kagan, the 2016 Panofsky Fellows at SLAC
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Participants of SLAC’s summer school learned about the next generation of collider physics through lectures, topical conference talks, student projects, poster sessions and tours.

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The scientists develop methods to study neutrinos from star explosions and search for unknown particles and forces with possible ties to dark matter.

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The Standard Model is far more than elementary particles arranged in a table.

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The first website to be hosted in the US has grown to be an invaluable hub for open science.

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In its final run, the LUX experiment increased its sensitivity four-fold, but dark matter remains elusive.

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What’s the difference between a synchrotron and a cyclotron, anyway?

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VIA Symmetry Magazine

The Neutrino Turns 60

Project Poltergeist led to the discovery of the ghostly particle.