At CERN, we probe the fundamental structure of particles that make up everything around us. We do so using the world's largest and most complex scientific instruments.
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The research programme at CERN covers topics from kaons to cosmic rays, and from the Standard Model to supersymmetry
Dark matter
The early universe
The Higgs boson
The Standard Model
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CERN's accelerators
The Antiproton Decelerator
High-Luminosity LHC
Accelerating: radiofrequency cavities
Steering and focusing: magnets and superconductivity
Circulating: ultra-high vacuum
Cooling: cryogenic systems
Powering: energy at CERN
The CERN Data Centre
The Worldwide LHC Computing Grid
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Open source for open science
The birth of the web
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Norway was one of the 12 founding states who signed the CERN convention was signed in 1953.
CERN and the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) will work together in all domains of science, technology and engineering
Two Norwegian school classes who recently visited CERN thanked their guides with physics-themed jumpers
Thirty-one students evaluated the market potential of three CERN technologies this week as part of a collaboration with their Norwegian university