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SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
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    Who we are

    We explore radically new ideas with an entrepreneurial mindset.

    Science and User Support Building to the left and Arrillaga Science Center building to the right from above the Main Quad at SLAC's campus.
    • Research

      Get an overview of research at SLAC: X-ray and ultrafast science, particle and astrophysics, cosmology, particle accelerators, biology, energy and technology.

    • X-ray and Ultrafast science icon X-ray & ultrafast science

      Revealing nature’s fastest processes with X-rays, lasers and electrons

    • Physics of the universe science icon Physics of the universe

      Studying the particles and forces that knit the cosmos together

    • Advanced Accelerators science icon Advanced accelerators

      Building smaller, faster, more powerful accelerators for all

    • Science of life science icon Science of life

      Understanding the machinery of life at its most basic level

    • New technologies science icon New technologies

      Inventing new tools for science and society

    • Energy sciences science icon Energy sciences

      Finding clean, sustainable solutions for the world’s energy challenges

    Spotlight

    SLAC science explained

    Cut through the jargon while exploring our research.

    SAGE campers have fun experimenting with a Van de Graff generator
    • Facilities & Centers

      Learn more about the places where science happens at SLAC: our major facilities, institutes and centers.

    • SCIENTIFIC FACILITIES
      • LCLS website

        Linac Coherent Light Source

      • SSRL website

        Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource

      • FACET-II website

        Facility for Advanced Accelerator Experimental Tests

      • CryoEM website

        Cryogenic Electron Microscopy

    • JOINT INSTITUTES & CENTERS
      • SIMES website

        Stanford Institute for Materials & Energy Science

      • KIPAC website

        Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics & Cosmology

      • PULSE website

        Stanford PULSE Institute

      • SUNCAT website

        Center for Interface Science & Catalysis

      • SLAC-Stanford Battery Center

    NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory LSST

    SLAC & Stanford build the world’s largest digital camera for the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST).

    A drone photo of Rubin Observatory while taking pictures during the First Look observing campaign
    • Work with Us

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      Apply to become a user of our scientific research facilities and instruments.

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    Join our united workforce.

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    • News & Events

      Get the latest news about the lab, our science and discoveries. Explore SLAC events and learn how to participate.

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      This joint publication of SLAC and Fermilab is your view into the world of particle physics.

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    Upcoming public lecture

    Reinventing the way we break down plastic waste

    Thursday, March 26, 2026
    7:00–8:00 p.m. PDT

    Public Lecture: Ozge Bozkurt
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Feature

Understanding Magnetic Memory One Layer at a Time

“Smaller, faster, cheaper" is Silicon Valley's mantra for progress. But as critical components shrink to near atomic dimensions, it’s becoming much more difficult for...

June 6, 2011  ·  3 min read
Peeling Back the Layers of Magnetic Memory
Feature

Q&A: Alan Heirich and Elliott Slaughter Take On SLAC’s Big Data Challenges

As members of the lab’s Computer Science Division, they develop the tools needed to handle ginormous data volumes produced by the next generation of...

January 9, 2018  ·  6 min read
SLAC Computer Science Team
Video

3D Printing for Perfect Metal Parts

Public lecture presented by Christopher Tassone

March 26, 2019  ·  01:10:20  runtime
stillframe for public lecture
Video
Photograph

EPix cleanroom

SLAC’s Chris Kenney holds a 16-module, 2.2-megapixel ePix10k X-ray camera. 

December 14, 2021
SLAC’s Chris Kenney holds a 16-module
Illustration

Neural network

Artistic representation of a neural network superimposed on an electron beam profile.
March 24, 2021
Artistic representation of a neural network superimposed on an electron beam profile
Public Lecture Poster

Leaving Transistors in the Dust poster

June 30, 2021
Poster Image: A brain with computing devices around it
Public Lecture Poster

Seeing the Universe Through Quantum Eyes

September 22, 2022
poster for public lecture called Seeing the universe through quantum eyes
Illustration

SLAC’s ACE3P Software

To find the best possible shape for an accelerator component (left), researchers often have to tweak a number of factors...
August 22, 2022
A diagram shows a curvy gray shape before (left) and after its shape is optimized by trimming away a section shown in green. A chart at center shows blue and red lines converging on an ideal target value over a number of simulation runs.
Illustration

LSST camera focal plane

The Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) Camera’s focal plane has a surface area large enough to capture a portion of the sky...

September 23, 2022
LSST camera focal plane
Video

Leaving Transistors in the Dust: Visualizing the Next Computing Revolution

Public lecture presented by Aaron Lindenberg

July 29, 2021  ·  01:29:43  runtime
brain with computing images around it.
Video
Video

Holograms at the Nanoscale: New Imaging for Nature's Tiniest Structures

Public lecture presented by Taisia Gorkhover

June 6, 2017  ·  01:06:23  runtime
stillframe from public lecture Holograms at the Nanoscale
Video
Video

Kitware dashboard developed for use with SLAC’s ACE3P software

This animation shows an accelerator cavity whose design is being optimized with the help of a dashboard Kitware developed for use with SLAC’s ACE3P...
October 21, 2022
Video
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