In the news

News highlights featuring Fermilab

851 - 860 of 1535 results

The quest for new physics with the Physics Beyond Colliders program

    From Nature Physics, April 6, 2020: The Physics Beyond Colliders study was launched three years ago to explore the future physics projects below the high-energy frontier, including explorations of the dark sector and precision measurements of strongly interacting processes. The methodology employed to compare the reach of those projects has raised interest in the collider, neutrino and nonaccelerator communities.

    Why do matter particles come in threes? A physics titan weighs in.

      From Quanta Magazine, March 30, 2020: Three progressively heavier copies of each type of matter particle exist, and no one knows why. A new paper by Steven Weinberg takes a stab at explaining the pattern, and summarizes a paper by Fermilab scientists Bogdan Dobrescu and Patrick Fox on the spread of the particles’ masses.

      Quantum computing meets particle physics for LHC data analysis

        From Physics World, April 3, 2020: A collaboration that includes Fermilab scientists is exploring how quantum computing could be used to analyze the vast amount of data produced by experiments on the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. The researchers have shown that a “quantum support vector machine” can help physicists make sense out of the huge amounts of information generated at CERN.

        Astronomers find 139 new minor planets in the outer solar system

          From Astronomy, March 31, 2020: Astronomers have discovered 139 new minor planets orbiting the Sun beyond Neptune by searching through data from the Dark Energy Survey, which is led by Fermilab. The new method for spotting small worlds is expected to reveal many thousands of distant objects in coming years — meaning these first hundred or so are likely just the tip of the iceberg.

          Astronomers discover more than 100 new planets

            From WDRB, March 29, 2020: A study published earlier this month by astronomers at the University of Pennsylvania distinguished more than 100 new planets in our solar system, but estimates show there could be as many as 70,000. These trans-Neptunian objects were found in the data gathered by the Dark Energy Survey, led by Fermilab.

            The best books on the Big Bang

              From Five Books, March 30, 2020: Fermilab scientist Dan Hooper gives his recommendations for books on the Big Bang and talks about whether our entire understanding of the universe is about to be turned upside down.

              Astronomers announce 100 new minor planets beyond Neptune

                From EarthSky, March 29, 2020: Astronomers analyzed data from the Dark Energy Survey, led by Fermilab, to find over 100 new little worlds in the cold outer reaches of our solar system. These trans-Neptunian objects orbit in the cold outer reaches of our solar system, out beyond Neptune, taking hundreds of years to orbit the sun once.