Learn why the neutrino detector aims to capture elusive particles, hoping to reveal why the universe is the way it is.
These particles are so ghostly that trillions of them pass through Earth each day without notice. So, how do we detect them?
In this week’s Science for All newsletter, Vasudevan Mukunth explains a new way to detect radioactive materials using ...
On March 24, at the annual Rencontres de Moriond conference taking place in La Thuile, Italy, the LHCb collaboration at CERN ...
In this week’s Science for All newsletter, Vasudevan Mukunth explains a new way to detect radioactive materials using ...
The MCAST Institute of Engineering and Transport (IET) has joined the ALICE experiment at CERN, enhancing collaboration in ...
Strings of photodetectors anchored to the seabed off the coast of Sicily have detected the most energetic neutrino ever ...
Scientists are diving into the deep sea to study one of the universe’s biggest mysteries—quantum gravity. Using KM3NeT, a ...
I began graduate study in 1975, the midpoint of the first 100 years of quantum mechanics, 50 years ago and 50 years after the ...
New quadrupole magnets for the High-Luminosity LHC will use Nb3Sn conductors for the first time in an accelerator.