The value of basic research
How can we measure the worth of scientific knowledge? Economic analysts give it a shot.
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How can we measure the worth of scientific knowledge? Economic analysts give it a shot.
Many visitors to Fermilab reasonably conclude from its name that Enrico Fermi worked at the laboratory, but he never did. In fact, he died in 1954, years before scientists even officially recommended the construction of a U.S. accelerator laboratory.
You can’t buy electronics for particle detectors off the shelf. Farah Fahim is one of the engineers who designs them.
The question is more complicated than it seems.
U.S.-CERN partnership takes on the mystery of neutrinos.
Sometimes being a physicist means giving detector parts the window seat.
As part of our year-long recognition of Fermilab’s 50th anniversary, we will feature a few important milestones in the laboratory’s history every month.
Scientists furthered studies of the Higgs boson, neutrinos, dark matter, dark energy and cosmic inflation and continued the search for undiscovered particles, forces and principles.
Edwin L. Goldwasser, deputy director of Fermilab at its founding in 1967, died on Dec. 14. He was 97.
As 2016 comes to a close, Symmetry writer Mike Perricone takes us through the latest additions to his collection of popular science books related to particle physics.