SLAC topics

Science news RSS feed

The latest news about SLAC research, science programs, facilities and people. 

More on our News Center and Media Resources pages

Browse tagged content

Scientists create artificial catalysts inspired by living enzymes

News Feature

A SLAC/Stanford manufacturing technique could help make inexpensive polymer-based solar cells an attractive alternative to silicon-crystal wafers.

News Feature

SUNCAT and SIMES researchers have received funding from Stanford's Global Climate and Energy Project to support research related to generating renewable fuels.

News Feature

Ultrafast Electron Diffraction Reveals Rapid Motions of Atoms and Molecules

News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

The Mystery of Particle Generations

Why are there three almost identical copies of each particle of matter?

News Feature

Observations of this kind could lead scientists to the source of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays.

News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

One Higgs is the Loneliest Number

Physicists discovered one type of Higgs boson in 2012. Now they’re looking for more.

News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

Is this the only universe?

Our universe could be just one small piece of a bubbling multiverse.

News Feature

A researcher interviewed SLAC and Stanford administrators, scientists and Nobel laureates and sifted through archival materials to better understand the drivers for change in...

Image - Olof Hallonsten
Press Release

A biomedical breakthrough reveals never-before-seen details of the human body’s cellular switchboard that regulates sensory and hormonal responses.

 Illustration shows arrestin (yellow), an important type of signaling protein, while docked with rhodopsin (orange).
News Feature

Explore the elementary particles that make up our universe.

News Feature
VIA Symmetry Magazine

Something Goes Bump in the Data

The  ATLAS and CMS experiments at the LHC see something mysterious, but it’s too soon to pop the Champagne.

News Feature

In separate studies, researchers at Stanford and the University of Wisconsin-Madison report advances on chemical reactions essential to fuel-cell technology.