Scientists from around the world are at Brown to discuss what is known, and what needs to be learned, about the long-sought particle discovered a decade ago.
Imagine a particle so ghostly that over 100 trillion of them could pass through you every single second without you noticing ...
What if I told you that while you can't see dark matter, maybe you can hear it? I know, I know, it sounds crazy…and it is ...
Researchers have moved one step closer to solving one of science’s greatest mysteries—why the universe is filled with matter instead of nothing. Scientists at Indiana University have made a major ...
How did the universe come into being? There are a multitude of theories on this subject. In a Physical Review Letters paper, ...
Daniel Whiteson and Andy Warner’s upcoming book is a philosophical exploration of the humanity behind our desire to find ...
Nobel laureate Chen Ning Yang, who spent decades advancing physics in both the U.S. and China, died in Beijing on Saturday at ...
Chinese scientist is remembered as one of the greatest physicists of the 20th century, alongside Albert Einstein.
Recently, I watched a fellow particle physicist talk about a calculation he had pushed to a new height of precision. His tool? A 1980s-era computer program called FORM. Particle physicists use some of ...