News
News
50 years of giant electroweak discoveries
On 19 July 1973, the Gargamelle bubble chamber at CERN revealed the existence of weak neutral currents and put the nascent Standard Model of particle physics on solid ground
Preparing for a quantum leap: researchers chart future for use of quantum computing in particle physics
Experts from CERN, DESY, IBM Quantum and others publish a white paper identifying activities in particle physics that could benefit from the application of quantum-computing technologies
GBAR joins the anticlub
The GBAR experiment at CERN has just joined the very select club of experiments that have succeeded in synthesising antihydrogen atoms
ALICE shines light into the nucleus to probe its structure
New ALICE results shed light on the nature of gluonic matter at the LHC
Arts at CERN collaborates with Science Gallery Melbourne and the ARC Centre for the exhibition “Dark Matters”
Opening on 5 August, “Dark Matters” will bring artworks from Arts at CERN programmes to Australian audiences for the first time
The 2023 CERN openlab Summer Student programme is under way – don't miss our lectures on exciting computing topics!
CERN tech to help investigate the dark universe
ESA’s recently launched Euclid telescope will rely on CERN software and computing infrastructure to help it map the effects of dark matter and dark energy on the Universe
From physics to finance: how can CERN tools help to uncover market manipulation?
With its world-renowned expertise in the analysis of massive volumes of data, CERN has started a unique collaboration with leading market-surveillance experts to explore how particle physics could help to build future manipulation-detection techniques
Joan Heemskerk wins CERN’s Collide Copenhagen residency award
Joan Heemskerk, one of the pioneers of web-based art, has been selected as the winner of this year’s edition