Bring a folding chair
National Society of Black Physicists President Renée Horton talks with Symmetry about finding a place to belong in physics.
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National Society of Black Physicists President Renée Horton talks with Symmetry about finding a place to belong in physics.
What’s it like being a theoretical neutrino physicist working on the Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility?
Representatives from local small businesses are invited to discuss opportunities to strengthen relationships between the lab and the local business community at the March 14 fair.
From Astronomy, Feb. 22, 2018: The supernova, dubbed DES16C2nm, was first detected back in August 2016 by the Dark Energy Survey, which is currently mapping several hundred million galaxies in order to learn more about the mysterious force known as dark energy.
When they look for violations of Einstein’s general relativity, physicists deliberately plan experiments to find nothing at all.
From Newsweek, Feb. 21, 2018: DES162nm was first spotted in August 2016 using the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile. The investigations were part of an international collaboration known as the Dark Energy Survey—a project designed to map hundreds of millions of galaxies in a search for the mysterious force that is thought to be behind the accelerating expansion of the universe.
Fermilab’s 2017 artist-in-residence, Jim Jenkins, melds pieces of physics experiments into his creations.
The DUNE collaboration continues to grow as they make notable progress on detector prototypes and components.
From Northern Public Radio, Feb. 13, 2018: The U.S. House has passed a measure Tuesday sponsored by a northern Illinois Congressman that increases funding at two federal labs in Illinois.
From Crain’s Chicago Business, Feb. 14, 2018: The U.S. House took a big step toward the next generation of research at Fermilab, authorizing a $1.8 billion project that would shoot subatomic particles from Fermilab’s facility to South Dakota.