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On Friday, May 24, at 1:15 p.m., experimental physicist Yongsheng Gao will speak in room 143 in the Science Building. Gao collaborated with the team that discovered the Higgs boson earlier this year, and he will explain the particle’s relevance and the experiments used to detected it. Known in mainstream media as the “God particle,” [...]
Singapore, May 13, 2013 - Zecotek Photonics Inc. (TSX-V: ZMS; Frankfurt: W1I), a developer of leading-edge photonics technologies for medical, industrial and scientific markets, today announced it is working ...
Joe Incandela, the announcer of the Higgs Boson discovery and a particle physicist, spoke about the goals of the Large Hadron Collider program and its progress over the past four years in a lecture on Thursday night. He highlighted significant discoveries and their implications for our understanding of the universe.
The physicist who gave his name to the Higgs boson particle has been honoured in recognition of his contribution to science.
Physicist Fabiola Gianotti, co-discoverer of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva, Switzerland, will deliver a free public lecture, “The Higgs Boson and Our Life.” The talk is part of a 3-day celebration of UC Berkeley physicist Bruno Zumino, whose theory of supersymmetry has emerged as a possible explanation for the variety of fundamental particles seen in nature.
(Phys.org) —Now that it looks like the hunt for the Higgs boson is over, particles of dark matter are at the top of the physics "Most Wanted" list. Dozens of experiments have been searching for them, but often come up with contradictory results.
In honor of today's 20th anniversary of the World Wide Web, its creators at the research laboratory CERN (the Higgs Boson guys) have gone all nostalgic — and a bit anti-establishment — in recreating the first publicly available free web page out there: Info.cern.ch. This is just a nostalgic redux of that original site — an actual original at that original address doesn't actually exist because ...
The physicist who gave his name to the Higgs boson particle has been honoured in recognition of his contribution to science.
Efforts to promote science to young people will be backed with a share of £3 million, the Scottish Government has announced.
CERN may be best known for its hunt for the Higgs Boson, but a team at the organization are also tracking down internet history, working to restore the first ever website to its original URL and server. The project, which will see the European Organisation for Nuclear Research restore World Wide Web founder Tim Berners-Lee’s first page Read The Full Story
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