03/06/24 ScienceNews Forests might serve as enormous neutrino detectors To detect ultra-high energy neutrinos, scientists need huge detectors.
03/01/24 Nature How heavy is a neutrino? Race to weigh mysterious particle heats up Physicists discuss experiments that could improve laboratory measurements of the super-light particle’s mass.
02/23/24 The Guardian Quantum physics makes small leap with microscopic gravity measurement The experiment recorded minuscule gravitational pull as a step toward understanding how force operates at the subatomic level.
02/21/24 Fermilab Scientists get ready to observe neutrinos with SBND After nearly a decade of planning, prototyping and construction, the Short-Baseline Near Detector collaboration is in the final stretch of commissioning of their detector.
A physicists’ guide to the ethics of artificial intelligence 05/06/24 Laura Dattaro Physics may seem like its own world, but different sectors using machine learning are all part of the same universe.
09/12/23 Imagining the future of gravitational-wave research To understand why scientists are excited about detecting a new background, just look to the history of studies of the CMB.
09/05/23 Rap with an undercurrent of particle physics UK musician Consensus spins the big ideas of physics into rap and hip-hop tracks.
08/29/23 Life along the future DUNE beamline Unseen neutrinos, visible lives: A photographer journeys through the Midwest.
08/22/23 Vera C. Rubin Observatory brings the universe to everyone The Rubin Observatory is making education and outreach a top priority.
08/15/23 Seeing the full picture with line-intensity mapping Scientists are championing a relatively new technique as a method to understand the structure of the early universe in three dimensions.
08/10/23 Muon g-2 doubles down with latest measurement, explores uncharted territory Fermilab's Muon g-2 experiment brings particle physics closer to a showdown between theory and experiment.
08/01/23 IceCube and NANOGrav open new windows onto the universe New results from a neutrino telescope and a gravitational-wave observatory show how astronomers use different forms of messengers to study the cosmos.