Events archive

View upcoming and past public events at SLAC. Please also visit our events page for more information. Sign up for email alerts here.

Presented by Caterina Vernieri. The Higgs boson was discovered in 2012 at the world’s most powerful particle collider, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland.

 At SLAC we are constructing the core of the biggest and fastest camera ever built to capture the Higgs boson in action.
Past Event · Public lecture

Improving Batteries from the Atoms Up

Presented by Yijin Liu. In batteries, energy is stored in tiny particles within the electrodes that individually breathe in and out and chemically evolve as the battery is charged and discharged.

Public Lecture | Improving Batteries from the Atoms Up presented by Yijin Liu
Past Event · public lecture

How Science Unlocks Copper's Hidden Powers

Presented by Diana Gamzina. In particle accelerators, electrons are pushed to extreme energies by electromagnetic fields that oscillate inside evacuated metal cavities. Those cavities are usually made of copper.

illustration of woman scientist observing stacked copper discs

Presented by Zeeshan Ahmed. Shortly after the birth of the universe, space was filled by a plasma that was literally red-hot. The light radiated by that plasma has traveled the vast emptiness of space for billions of years, with the...

Past Event · Public Lecture

Discovering the Colors of Fossil Creatures

Presented by Nick Edwards. Until recently, the colors of ancient life forms existed only in our imaginations.

video still frame from lecture about fossil colors

Presented by Maria Elena Monzani. The nature and origin of dark matter are among the most compelling mysteries of contemporary science.

Presented by Sebastian Ellis. The nature of dark matter is one of the most captivating and fundamental open problems facing physicists today. Over many decades, we have collected overwhelming evidence for the existence of dark matter in the universe.

illustration bending a stream of dark matter
Particle accelerators are used every day in a wide range of scientific, medical and industrial applications. But did you know that the task of operating these machines is far from mundane? For example, for every experiment at  SLAC’s X-ray laser...
stillframe public lecture super human operator
Giant planets can be up to 13 times the mass of Jupiter, while the least massive stars are about 80 times the mass of Jupiter.  In between are objects called “brown dwarfs” – too massive to be called planets, but...
stillframe for public lecture

Presented by Sebastien Boutet. SLAC's X-ray laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source, launched a new generation of light sources when it opened 10 years ago last month, with beams 10 billion times brighter than any before.

stillframe from public lecture video Seeing is Exploding