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.

Organic semiconductors hold immense promise for use in thin film and flexible displays – picture an iPad you can roll up – but they haven’t yet reached the speeds needed to drive high definition displays.

Single crystal of new organic semiconductor shown in polarized light (Image by Anatoliy Sokolov.)

Jonathan Rivnay, a Stanford graduate student in materials science who has conducted significant research at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource on the relationships between the structure and electrical properties of organic semiconductors, has been selected to receive the 2011 Melvin...

2011 Klein Award Winner Jonathan Rivnay (Photo by Mike Ross.)

Stefan Mannsfeld, staff scientist at SLAC, has been announced as the winner of the 2011 William E. and Diane M. Spicer Young Investigator Award.

2011 Spicer Award winner Stephan Mannsfeld (Photo by Mike Ross.)

Although physicists from two experiments at CERN's Large Hadron Collider and from Fermilab’s Tevatron collider recently reported at the Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics that they didn't find the Higgs boson, they're continuing to home in on the elusive...

BaBarians at EPS

A new X-ray technique for producing instantaneous nanoscale images of the magnetic polarity in materials has been demonstrated by SLAC scientist Joshua Turner.

Magnetic domains revealed in cobalt alloy by new technique (Image courtesy Joshua Turner.)

Two scientists from the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology have been testing a method to look past the intense radiation pouring out of merging galaxy pairs to see the supermassive black holes at their cores.

Resolving two possible active galactic nuclei (Image courtesy Brian Gerke and Greg Madejski.)

Theoretical physicist and SLAC Professor Emeritus Helen Quinn chaired a National Academy of Sciences committee that last week issued A Framework for K-12 Science Education, which “identifies the key scientific practices, concepts and ideas that all students should learn by...

SLAC Professor Emeritus Helen Quinn (Photo courtesy Helen Quinn.)

It sounds like something out of a cheesy science fiction movie, but thanks to new research led by Yi Cui, a professor of photon science at SLAC, transparent cell phones are one step closer to becoming a reality.

A sample of PDMS, the basis of transparent batteries (Photo courtesy Stanford News Service.

The synchrotron light source community is a large one – about 70 facilities exist around the world – but the men and women who run them are like an extended family.

Japanese researchers at Beamline 4-2 (Photo by Lori Ann White.)

In repeatedly and systematically surveying the sky with deep, large-field-of-view images in six optical color bands on a 3 billion pixel camera for years, the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope will home in on the nature of dark energy and increase...

Possible imperfections in LSST images

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