Skip to main content
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
    • About

      Learn about our science, people, facilities and partners. Discover our history and vision for the future.

    • OUR STORY
      • Mission, vision, values
      • History
    • LAB OVERVIEW
      • SLAC at a glance
      • Lab organization
      • Our partnerships
    • OUR PEOPLE
      • Leadership
      • Meet our teams
      • Faculty
    • VISIT SLAC
      • Public tours
      • Contact us
    • Resources
      • Images, videos & more
      • Brochures & fact sheets
    • Connect With Us
      • Facebook
      • Flickr
      • Instagram
      • LinkedIn
      • Twitter
      • YouTube
    video

    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

      Find a career, partner with us or apply to use our tools and facilities.

    • PARTNER WITH US
      • For industry partners
      • Research partnerships & tech transfer
      • Technology Innovation
    • CAREERS AT SLAC
      • Job openings
      • Internships
      • Life at SLAC
    • USE OUR FACILITIES

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

    • COMING TO SLAC
    • BECOME A SUPPLIER

    Careers at SLAC

    Join our united workforce.

    SLAC staff in main quad
    • News & Events

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

    • NEWS CENTER
      • News archive
      • Media resources
      • Images & videos
    • SLAC EVENTS
      • Public lectures
      • Scientific seminars
      • Community events
    • SYMMETRY MAGAZINE

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

    • EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS
      • Educational tours
      • Resources for students & educators
    • Connect With Us
      • Facebook
      • Flickr
      • Instagram
      • LinkedIn
      • Twitter
      • YouTube
    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
Filter search by
Staff portalStanford directoryComing to SLACResources for…
  1. Home
  2. …
Filter by research area
  • Physics of the universe (94)
  • X-ray and ultrafast science (8)
  • New technologies (4)
  • Advanced accelerators (1)
Filter by Type
  • News (83)
  • Image (29)
  • Page (21)
  • Video (15)
  • Event (9)
  • resource (1)
Sort by
158 results
Display Grid Display List
Feature

Rubin Observatory will reveal dark matter’s ghostly disruptions of stellar streams

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

April 15, 2024  ·  5 min read
An illustration of streams of stars flowing around a spiral galaxy.
News Release

Standard model of the Universe withstands most precise test by Dark Energy Survey

SLAC and Stanford astrophysicists made crucial contributions to the galaxy survey, showing that the universe clumps and expands as predicted by our best cosmological...

August 3, 2017  ·  6 min read
Blanco Telescope
Feature

Remote eyes on the sky: Inside SLAC’s Rubin control room

With survey operations set to begin this fall, the Rubin control room at SLAC will serve as a key hub for training and remote...

September 18, 2025  ·  5 min read
First Photons in the Rubin control room at SLAC
Feature

NSF–DOE Rubin Observatory’s unparalleled vision will revolutionize multi-messenger astronomy

Vera C. Rubin Observatory will unite coordinated observations of cosmic phenomena using the four messengers of the universe.

September 12, 2024  ·  4 min read
Two stars collide, sending particles to earth.
News Brief

Rubin Observatory will unlock fossil record of galaxy cluster evolution

Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s fast-moving telescope and huge digital camera will illuminate the faint glow of free-floating stars within galaxy clusters, providing unprecedented insight...

December 4, 2023  ·  4 min read
A smattering of hundreds of galaxies of different shapes and sizes against a black background. Semi-opaque teal blobs surround and connect many of the galaxies.
Video

What is NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory?

Aaron Roodman is the Deputy Director of the Vera Rubin Observatory: 30 years in the making, this new observatory will revolutionize our view of...

March 6, 2024  ·  00:02:44  runtime
Stillframe for LSST POST1
Video
Feature

Rubin Observatory will detect thousands of brown dwarfs, unlocking Milky Way mysteries

Vera C. Rubin Observatory will capture the faint light of distant brown dwarfs to help scientists understand the Milky Way’s formation and evolution.

July 15, 2024  ·  3 min read
Brown spots surround a spiral galaxy.
Video

How Rubin will map the universe

Over the full 10-year survey, Rubin Observatory will produce half an exabyte of data. To make use of this data, teams of scientists and...
February 20, 2026
Video
Feature

Roman Space Telescope and Rubin Observatory scientists collaborate on a giant testbed of simulated galaxies

The synthetic galaxy catalog will help test Roman's capabilities and foster collaboration with the Rubin project. 

March 13, 2023  ·  4 min read
A field of bright spots on a black background.
Feature

Dialing gravitational lensing research up to 11

NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory will add an unprecedented amount of cosmological data to the study of the structure and expansion of the Universe.

June 5, 2025  ·  10 min read
An illustration of a woman holding a book is surrounded by photographic negatives showing pictures of the universe.
News Release

Ever-changing universe revealed in first imagery from NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory

The state-of-the-art ‘big-data facility’ unveils its first images and video, bringing the night sky to life like never before.

June 23, 2025  ·  11 min read
This image combines 678 separate images taken by NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory in just over seven hours of observing time. Combining many images in this way clearly reveals otherwise faint or invisible details, such as the clouds of gas and dust that comprise the Trifid nebula (top) and the Lagoon nebula, which are several thousand light-years away from Earth
A Vibrant Community

Our people

To achieve our ambitious goals and keep SLAC a great place to work, the lab needs a creative, diverse and united workforce – people with a wide variety of experiences and ideas, skills and backgrounds. SLAC people are scientists, engineers...

Vera C. Rubin Observatory LSST Camera Focal Plane Build
  • Go to previous page
  • Page 1
  • …
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Currently on page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • …
  • Page 14
  • Go to next page

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory 
2575 Sand Hill Road  
Menlo Park, CA 94025-7015  
650.926.3300

  • Coming to SLAC
  • Connect with us
  • Contact us
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Sign up for our email

Monthly newsletter for cutting-edge science, SLAC milestones and events.

Sign up

Bold People
Visionary Science
Real Impact

We explore how the universe works at the biggest, smallest and fastest scales and invent powerful tools used by scientists around the globe.

  • About
    • Our story
    • Our people
    • Lab overview
    • Visit SLAC
    • Resources
    • Connect with us
  • Research
    • X-ray & ultrafast science
    • Advanced accelerators
    • New technologies
    • Physics of the universe
    • Science of life
    • Energy sciences
    • SLAC science explained
  • Facilities & centers
    • Scientific facilities
    • Joint institutes & centers
  • Work with us
    • Partner with us
    • Become a supplier
    • Use our facilities
    • Careers at SLAC
  • News & events
    • News center
    • Symmetry Magazine
    • Media resources
    • Events
    • Educational programs
    • Connect with us
  • Staff portal
  • Privacy policy
  • Accessibility
  • Vulnerability disclosure
  • A–Z index
  • Website feedback
Home
  • SLAC home
  • Maps & directions
  • Emergency info
  • Careers

© 2026 SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory is operated by Stanford University for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science.

Stanford University U.S. Department of Energy
Top Top
Back to top Back to top