Eight things you might not know about light
Light is all around us, but how much do you really know about the photons speeding past you?
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Light is all around us, but how much do you really know about the photons speeding past you?
The collaboration between Russian institutions and Fermilab in the 1980s became, for some, a symbol of two competing countries overcoming their differences and working together to move the field of particle physics forward.
One: The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment will look for more than just neutrinos.
A partnership between three national U.S. laboratories and CERN to upgrade the LHC has yielded the strongest accelerator magnet ever created.
A high school science class participates in CMS data analysis through QuarkNet.
From OSTI blog, April 1, 2016: The DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information is working with Fermilab scientist Jim Simone to register scientific datasets produced by a domain collaboration.
Perplexed by gravity? Don’t let it get you down.
The first cryomodule for SLAC’s future light source, LCLS-II, is on schedule to be delivered at the end of the year.
From ABC7 News, March 30, 2016 (with video): The Chicago area hosted a special guest Wednesday as Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi toured parts of the city and the suburbs, including Fermilab. His first official visit to Chicago, it was the first stop in a four-day tour of the United States focused on trade issues between the U.S. and Italy.
From The Beacon-News, March 31, 2016: Italian Prime Minister Renzi rolled in to Fermilab on Wednesday with several dozen other Italian citizens to meet with scientists, including some of Italian birth, and tour the campus’ Industrial Center Building.