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.
This kind of ‘magic’ could lead to a computer revolution.
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 ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists mimic Big Bang on Earth and turn lead into real gold
In a cavernous tunnel beneath the French–Swiss border, physicists have briefly recreated conditions that existed microseconds after the Big Bang and, in the process, knocked lead atoms into becoming ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists spot a neutrino 100,000x more powerful than any particle collider
A single subatomic particle that hit Earth in 2023 carried roughly 100,000 times more energy than anything humanity has ever ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New particle data hints at something standard physics cannot explain
Two independent lines of evidence from the world’s most powerful particle experiments are converging on the same ...
A new heat exchange system between the LHC and the French town of Ferney-Voltaire is directing waste heat energy from CERN's accelerator to warm thousands of homes and businesses.
Gadget Review on MSN
How the Large Hadron Collider became the world's most advanced neighborhood heater
CERN's Large Hadron Collider now heats thousands of French homes with waste heat, turning particle physics research into practical energy savings.
Morning Overview on MSN
This 17-mile machine might be powerful enough to spawn a black hole
Seventeen miles of underground tunnel, thousands of superconducting magnets, and protons whipped to a fraction below light ...
6don 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.
Space.com on MSN
Large Hadron Collider reveals 'primordial soup' of the early universe was surprisingly soupy
Using the world's most powerful particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, scientists have found that the quark-gluon plasma that filled the universe just after the Big Bang really was a ...
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