Events archive

View upcoming and past public events at SLAC. Please also visit our events page for more information. Sign up for email alerts here.

Upcoming Event · Public Lectures

Expecting the Unexpected with AI at Particle Colliders

Register to watch in person in the  Kavli Auditorium,  or watch the lecture live on our YouTube page In particle physics, we search for new elementary particles that signal extensions of the fundamental interactions of nature. Experiments at the...
Upcoming Event flyer
Dec 05
Register to watch in person in the  Kavli Auditorium,  or watch the lecture live on our  YouTube page. It is a mystery how the earliest organisms on earth evolved the means to thrive, grow and reproduce under the sparse conditions...
Public Lecture: Macon Abernathy
Past Event · STEM Community Day

STEM Community Day 2024

Thank you to all who joined us this year! 2024 event photos are available here   STEM Community Day is a fun-filled event that includes an action-packed program for all ages. Interactive demos Engaging displays Short science talks Mini...
Visitors watch a science demonstration at Community Day
Past Event · Seminars and conferences

2024 SSRL/LCLS Users’ Meeting

Learn more and register now
Participants present posters during the SSRL/LCLS Users’ Meeting at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

The Stanford-SLAC Cryo-EM Center will host an advanced cryo-EM image processing workshop.

aerial view of SLAC campus
Discovering millions of galaxies and unraveling the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy is far out! Join us at the Dutch Goose for SLAC on Tap on August 22 at 5 pm, when SLAC engineer Hannah Pollek will talk...
SLAC on Tap Hannah Polleck
Past Event · Seminars and conferences

52nd SLAC Summer Institute (SSI 2024)

The SLAC Summer Institute (SSI) is an annual two-week-long Summer School tradition since 1973. The theme of the 52st SLAC Summer Institute is “The Art of Precision: Calculations & Measurements.”

SLAC Summer Institute 2024 poster image

Presented by Chelsea Bartram

Public Lecture: Chelsea Bartram

The cosmic microwave background (CMB) is the afterglow of the Big Bang and represents the oldest light in the Universe, emitted when the Universe was 0.003% of its current age.

illustration of cosmos

Presented by Ashley James

Public Lecture: Ashley James