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.

In a home-grown version of a TED talk – famous for presenting “Ideas Worth Spreading” in exactly 18 minutes – SLAC’s Uwe Bergmann took an audience at Palo Alto’s Gunn High School on a wild ride through the Linac Coherent...

bergmann presentation at TEDxGunn

It was front page news around the world: a drug designed to disrupt malignant melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, was so successful in its latest round of testing in humans that the tests were halted – like an...

Representation of drug developed in part at SLAC at work against melanoma (Image courtesy Plexxikon Inc.)

From their seats in the Morrison Planetarium at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, visitors swoop through a redwood forest, into a single redwood leaf and finally into an individual cell to watch photosynthesis take place.

 Ji-hoon Kim (left) and Ralf Kaehler (right), both of KIPAC, stand before a snapshot of a large-scale reionization simulation. The blue regions indicate hot, ionized hydrogen gas. Photo by Brad Plummer.

The Linac Coherent Light Source at SLAC is the world’s first hard X-ray free-electron laser, or FEL, and one of the most complex light sources ever developed.

Ultrafast optical laser at the LCLS (Photo by Aubrie Pick.)

Menlo Park, Calif.--Scientists report today that they have taken a big step in determining what the first birds looked like more than 100 million years ago, when their relatives, the dinosaurs, still ruled the Earth.

calcium distribution in Confuciusornis sanctus

A new SLAC test facility has passed two important milestones and is gearing up for experiments aimed at dramatically shrinking the size and cost of future particle accelerators.

Uli Wienands, Jerry Yocky and Mark Hogan in the MCC (Photo by Mike Ross.)

Stanford physicist Matt Bellis deals in the infinitesimal. As a member of the BaBar collaboration based at SLAC, he studies what happens when an electron and a positron collide at certain energies.

Matt Bellis with the Particle Physics Windchime in the background (Photo by Brad Plummer.)

The latest report on SESAME, a synchrotron light source that will be the first big international science center in the Middle East, says it is progressing both technically and financially on the road to its scheduled opening in 2015.

The SESAME Facility (Photo courtesy SESAME.)

Menlo Park, Calif.—Glass, by definition, is amorphous; its atoms lack order and are arranged every which way.

Diamond Anvil Cell Like That Used to Squeeze Samples of Metallic Glass

"It takes a village," as Hillary Clinton famously wrote, "to raise a child."

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