Research associate Megan Mayer and graduate student Patrick Mitchell load a sample into a cryogenic electron microscope at SLAC.
Putting the fourth, and final, SuperCDMS tower safely back into its storage container.
A muon, center, spins like a top within the atomic lattice of a thin film of superconducting nickelate.
Identifying each tiny chemical step in photosynthesis could aid the development of renewable energy technology.
From left, SCU Physics Prof. Betty Young, Software Developer Concetta "Tina" Cartaro and Senior Staff Scientist Richard Partridge put the fourth, and final, SuperCDMS...
This photo shows a small fuel cell inside of a sample chamber at SLAC's SSRL. This experimental station allows scientists to study fuel cells...
This illustration shows arrestin, an important type of signaling protein, while docked with rhodopsin, a G protein-coupled receptor.
This image shows the SARS-CoV-2 virus's main protease, Mpro, and two strands of a human protein, called NEMO.