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Fundamental physics RSS feed

SLAC fundamental physics researchers study everything from elementary particles produced in accelerators to the large-scale structure of the universe. 

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Dark Energy Survey scientists have released a detailed map of dark matter – crucial information for a better understanding of galaxy formation and dark...

News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

Seeing Dark Matter Without Seeing

Indirect detection experiments might be the key to discovering invisible dark matter.

News Feature

Using a newly identified set of supernovae, researchers have found a way to measure distances in space twice as precisely as before.

News Feature

Reports by groups including Dark Energy Survey and Large Area Telescope scientists may provide new clues about the properties of mysterious dark matter.

News Feature

Two recent meetings at SLAC brought together experts working on computer hardware and software for LSST – a future telescope that will provide unprecedented...

News Feature

When SuperCDMS SNOLAB turns on in 2018 at the underground science laboratory in Canada, it will be able to see dark matter particles 10...

News Feature

Honored for early theoretical predictions that helped elucidate the nature of the strong force and the structure of the proton, he is still shaking...

SLAC theoretical physicist James D. "BJ" Bjorken
News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

What’s New for LHC Run II

The Large Hadron Collider gears up for restart.

News Feature

A previous study claiming the discovery of gravitational waves as cosmic inflation’s fingerprint has most likely been over-interpreted, scientists found in a joint analysis...

News Feature

Scientist Helen Quinn has had a significant impact on the field of theoretical physics.

News Feature

His election recognizes a long history of accomplishment that began more than two decades ago at the SLAC Linear Collider.

SLAC staff physicist Peter Rowson (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory)
News Feature
via Symmetry Magazine

Mirror, Mirror

After more than six years of grinding and polishing, the first-ever dual-surface mirror for a major telescope is complete.