News
News
CERN highlights in 2023
From high above to far below, journey through the CERN highlights of 2023
Watch: Music and physics: a spacetime voyage back to our origins, with Yo-Yo Ma and Fabiola Gianotti
Watch highlights of the world-renowned cellist in spoken and musical conversation with CERN Director-General
Shaping future quantum techniques in machine learning at CERN
The latest advancements in quantum techniques in machine learning have been presented at CERN, showcasing applications in particle physics and beyond
Hi-Lumi News: First magnet from the US Accelerator Upgrade Project shipped to CERN
Watch a timelapse of the unboxing of the first of ten cryo-assemblies from the US to be installed in the HL-LHC interaction regions
CERN Council decides to conclude cooperation with Russia and Belarus in 2024
The Organization’s cooperation with the Russian Federation and the Republic of Belarus will conclude at the expiry in 2024 of the International Cooperation Agreements (ICAs)
Charm is better than beauty at going with the flow
New ALICE measurements shed light on the dynamics of charm and beauty particles in quark–gluon plasma
CLOUD challenges current understanding of aerosol particle formation in polar and marine regions
The results imply that climate models are underestimating the formation rates of aerosol particles
Making the leap from the impossible to the possible
During the LHC era and on the cusp of the High-Luminosity LHC era, theoretical and experimental physicists are already using precision calculations to find the smallest deviations that might reveal new physics
Ethical, open and non-commercial: the Open Web Search project is designed to provide Europe with the right alternative to existing search engines
CERN recently hosted the fifth International Open Search symposium, where over 100 experts discussed how to make searching the web in Europe fairer and safer
HiLumi News: Successful test paves the way for magnet production at CERN
Engineers have successfully tested an improved design of a quadrupole magnet manufactured at CERN, confirming that niobium–tin technology is viable for accelerator magnets