News archive

Browse the full collection of SLAC press releases and news features and stay up to date on the latest scientific advancements at the laboratory.

One of the most striking features of particle collisions is the jet: a spray of particles, or energy – or both – produced when hadrons, the quark-containing particles that give the Large Hadron Collider its name, slam together.

A rainbow burst depicting a simulated black hole event in ATLAS detector

Tiny particles are making a big difference in the world of cancer therapy. And SLAC physicists—experts in particle transport—are using computer simulations to make those therapies safer.

Photo - SLAC software developer Joseph Perl sSLAC software developer Joseph Perl sitting in front of lectern

Shoucheng Zhang, Stanford Physicist and SIMES Scientist, Honored by American Physical Society

Shoucheng Zhang, Stanford Physicist and SIMES Scientist

William Atwood, a leading member of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope collaboration, will receive the 2012 W. K. H. Panofsky Prize in Experimental Particle Physics from the American Physical Society for his work as co-designer of the Large Area Telescope...

William Atwood, 2012 Panofsky Prize Winner

Up close, they look simple as can be: a pair of metal bars, each with one side polished to a brilliant shine.

SLAC scientists standing by the K-B mirror system at SSRL

Scientists at Stanford and SLAC have found a potential way to harness the amazing properties of topological insulators – materials that conduct electricity only along their surfaces – for use in electronics and other applications.

Diagram of electrons traveling through topological insulator

The world's first X-ray laser is not only a true laser, but it’s an extremely good one

Inside the Linac Coherent Light Source Inside the Linac Coherent Light Source

A technique SLAC scientists invented for scanning ancient manuscripts is now being used to probe the human brain, in research that could lead to new medical imaging methods and better treatments for stroke and other brain conditions.

Helen Nichol and several members of her team at SSRL

Diamonds can add more than sparkle and style to X-ray experiments at the Linac Coherent Light Source.

Photo - Diamond zone plate on the tip of a researcher's finger. The diamond zone plate fits on the tip of the researcher's finger

The strength, flexibility, transparency and high electrical conductivity of single-layer graphene make it a potentially unique and valuable material for the next generation of electronic devices.

3-D Image of Nitrogen Atom in Graphene

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