News archive

Browse the full collection of SLAC press releases and news features and stay up to date on the latest scientific advancements at the laboratory.

Harold Hwang and Tony Heinz were among 124 newly elected members.

Harold Hwang and Tony Heinz

The first reflective coating was applied to Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s 8.4-meter combined primary/tertiary mirror using the observatory’s onsite coating chamber.

A large mirror reflects equipment in the background.

SLAC is taking part in a multi-institutional effort to help reach net-zero carbon emissions goals in difficult-to-electrify industries.

This is a graphic representation of the roadmap to defossilize carbon
News Feature · VIA Symmetry Magazine

Symmetry: AI for control rooms

Scientists inside and outside of particle physics and astrophysics are leaning on AI for assistance with complex tasks.

Illustration of a scientist pinpointing part of a galaxy through the lens of a magnifying glass

Election to the academy honors exceptional scholars who discover and advance knowledge and who apply knowledge to the problems of society.

News Brief · VIA Stanford

SLAC's Thomas Devereaux named AAAS Fellow

Devereaux was honored for contributions to materials science and was among seven Stanford-affiliated researchers named AAAS Fellows this year.

Thomas Devereaux
News Feature · VIA Symmetry Magazine

Symmetry: Physics vocabulary, AI edition

Do you know your convolutional neural networks from your boosted decision trees?

Illustration of someone reading a physics vocabulary booklet

In the coming weeks, Symmetry will explore the ways scientists are using artificial intelligence to advance particle physics and astrophysics—in a series of articles written and illustrated entirely by humans.

Conceptual illustration of wool being spun into refracted light

The team developed a groundbreaking method that harnesses the structure of light to twist and tweak the properties of quantum materials. 

quantum control

Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s stunningly detailed images will illuminate distant stellar streams and their past encounters with dark matter.

An illustration of streams of stars flowing around a spiral galaxy.