Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists stunned as 'magic' particles suddenly appear in LHC
At CERN’s Large Hadron Collider on the edge of Geneva, scientists have reported a surprising twist in the behavior of matter.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
CERN chills giant magnet line for the world’s most powerful particle collider upgrade
Scientists in Switzerland have begun the cooldown of a 312-foot-long test stand for the ...
Scientists saw a quark plowing through primordial plasma for the first time, offering a rare look at the first moments after ...
This kind of ‘magic’ could lead to a computer revolution.
The LHC will enter a four-year “intensive work period” to “transform the LHC into the [High-Luminosity] LHC,” according to ...
In a recent experiment, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN produced particles believed to have only existed in the moments following the Big Bang. This remarkable achievement offers valuable ...
Terra Planet Earth on MSN
Researchers Report Unexpected LHC Particle Signals and the Hard Truth Is Uncertainty Grows
Top quark data may encode quantum magic, but the closer scientists look, the more selection, modeling, and proof matter every time ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. (Credit: Maximilien Brice/CERN/Wikimedia Commons) The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) can now chalk up one more use, alongside ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Mysterious particle decay hints at something huge lurking in physics
Something odd is happening deep inside the data streams from CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. A set of “forbidden” patterns in how unstable particles decay, combined with rare Higgs events and a ...
Bright Side on MSN
They’re turning off the Large Hadron Collider - the new plan is insane
The scientific community is buzzing with the news that the Large Hadron Collider is being powered down to make way for a transformation that is nothing short of revolutionary. This breaking science ...
16don MSN
This Man Says He Can Find the Hidden Universe—Now. Why Does Everyone Else Want to Wait 44 Years?
A new theory suggests the universe’s greatest secrets are hiding in a “zeptouniverse” that’s ready to be explored—without waiting until 2070 for a new collider.
Seventeen miles of underground tunnel, thousands of superconducting magnets, and protons whipped to a fraction below light speed have given the Large Hadron Collider a reputation that borders on myth.
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