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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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    • USE OUR FACILITIES

      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

First realistic portraits of squishy layer that’s key to battery performance

Cryo-EM snapshots of the solid-electrolyte interphase, or SEI, reveal its natural swollen state and offer a new approach to lithium-metal battery design.

January 6, 2022  ·  7 min read
A battery's liquid electrolyte clings to small holes in a cryo-EM sample holder.
Feature

Analysis of the rock record rules out atmospheric oxygen before the Great Oxygenation Event

New research questions ‘whiff of oxygen’ in Earth’s early history.

January 19, 2022  ·  4 min read
Blue and purple image showing cracks where arsenic and copper entered a shale sample.
Feature

Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument creates largest 3D map of the cosmos

DESI has already mapped out more galaxies than all previous 3D surveys combined, and it's just getting started.

January 19, 2022  ·  6 min read
Mayall Telescope Star Trails
Feature

Advancing materials science with the help of biology and a dash of dish soap

High-speed X-ray free-electron lasers have unlocked the crystal structures of small molecules relevant to chemistry and materials science, proving a new method that could...

January 19, 2022  ·  4 min read
Crystallography illustrations
Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

More than one way to make a qubit

Scientists are exploring a variety of ways to make quantum bits. We may not need to settle on a single one.

January 24, 2022
Illustration of butterfly collection
Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

The quantum squeeze

A technique from the newest generation of quantum sensors is helping scientists to use the limitations of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle to their advantage.

January 25, 2022
Illustration of a squid
Feature

SLAC and Stanford researchers reveal the fourth signature of the superconducting transition in cuprates

The results cap 15 years of detective work aimed at understanding how these materials transition into a superconducting state where they can conduct electricity...

January 26, 2022  ·  5 min read
Conceptual illlustration showing a beam of light entering from the right and hitting a material, ejecting a sphere representing an electron
Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

What is a quantum network?

As we step into the quantum age, here are four things to know about quantum networks.

January 26, 2022
Illustration of tree roots and mushrooms
Feature
VIA Stanford Report

Nine named AAAS Fellows from Stanford and SLAC

Nine faculty from Stanford and SLAC are among the 564 new Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

January 26, 2022
head shots of all AAAs fellows
Feature

Researchers use attosecond X-ray pulses to track electron motion in a highly excited quantum state of matter

Less than a millionth of a billionth of a second long, attosecond X-ray pulses allow researchers to peer deep inside molecules and follow electrons...

January 27, 2022  ·  5 min read
Illustration of attosecond coherent electron motions.
SLAC Science Explained

Cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM): amazing views of life’s machinery

Taking pictures of tiny, flash-frozen things with electrons is revolutionizing biology and technology. SLAC and Stanford host one of the world’s leading facilities for...

June 1, 2022  ·  6 min read
cryo-EM image of Caulobacter bacterium
SLAC Science Explained

Synchrotrons, the Swiss Army knives of science

The X-rays they produce reveal the secrets of everything from ancient texts to modern pharmaceuticals.

June 1, 2022  ·  4 min read
 A synchrotron is a type of particle accelerator that produces intense beams of light.
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