Fermilab’s Wilson Hall reopens to Visitors 5 days a week
From the Patch, Jan. 26, 2024
The Patch follows up on the Jan. 23 announcement that Wilson Hall is open to the public.
171 - 180 of 2095 results
From the Patch, Jan. 26, 2024
The Patch follows up on the Jan. 23 announcement that Wilson Hall is open to the public.
From Physics World, Jan. 24, 2023
The P5 panel’s recent recommendation of “our muon shot”, states that a muon accelerator program would fit with the U.S.’s ambition to host a major international collider facility. With the development, it would probe an understanding of the fundamental nature of the universe and offer substantial benefits when it comes to training the next generation of scientists.
From Big Think, Jan. 23, 2024
Don Lincoln explores if spaghettification is real and will an object get stretched as it falls into a black hole?
From the Black Hills Pioneer, Jan. 19, 2024
The first components for the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment have arrived in Lead, SD. Starting this spring the LBNF/DUNE project team and officials at the Sanford Underground Research Facility will begin tests to ensure cryostats for the experiment can be safely lowered down the Ross Shaft.
Physics World, Jan. 19, 2024
Anna Grassellino speaks with Physics World on why cross-disciplinary collaboration within the national laboratory framework and enabling technologies pioneered at Fermilab at the SQMS Center are leading to the success of practical applications of quantum computing and quantum sensing.
From Nature, Jan. 18, 2024
The P5 Panel’s bold suggestion to build a muon collider in the U.S. could be a good opportunity to unite particle physicists from around the world to establish whether a muon collider is feasible, at what cost and discover who can contribute expertise and facilities.
From Space.com, Jan 15, 2024
The most recent results from Dark Energy Survey of over 1,500 supernovas taken by the by the DECam calls the standard model of cosmology into question.
From the CERn Courier, Jan. 11, 2024
The P5 panel’s recent report identified several critical areas in cosmic evolution, neutrinos and dark matter where next-generation facilities could make a dramatic impact, including Fermilab.
From NIOR Lab, Jan. 8, 2024
The culmination of 25 years of research by astrophysicists of the Dark Energy Survey team has concluded that the Universe is expanding at an accelerating rate. The Dark Energy Survey observed almost two million distant galaxies using the Dark Energy Camera built and tested by Fermilab
making this the largest, deepest supernova sample ever obtained from a single telescope.
A professor at the University of Tennessee reimagines the way we teach STEM with a science-fiction story-based class.