
Serendipity at the Antiproton Decelerator opens the way to new antiproton chemistry
Most experiments at the Antiproton Decelerator (AD) at CERN involve laser or microwave studies of atoms such as antiprotonic helium and antihydrogen.
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Most experiments at the Antiproton Decelerator (AD) at CERN involve laser or microwave studies of atoms such as antiprotonic helium and antihydrogen.
Sixty years ago accelerator pioneer Robert Wilson published the paper in which he proposed using protons for cancer therapy. Ugo Amaldi and Gerhard Kraft describe how the field has since advanced, as ...
PROSCAN, the proton-therapy facility at PSI in Switzerland is about to resume patient treatment after commissioning a new dedicated superconducting proton accelerator, COMET. This will take the projec...
The latest jet-quenching results were a major topic of discussion at the second conference dedicated to the use of hard probes for investigating the hot and dense quark–gluon matter that is produced...
As preparations for the start-up of the LHC continue to gather pace, a meeting in Cracow gave physicists the opportunity to take time to look to the exciting physics in store.
This issue of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A contains papers by leading experts, beginning with basic concepts in plasma accelerators and the status and evolution of plasma-wakefiel...
This book contains articles by experts on many of the most important topics on which the electron-positron linear collider will focus.
Researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), together with colleagues from the University of Oxford , have accelerated electrons to more than 1 GeV in only 3.3 cm. This i...
Researchers from the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology have used the Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) at the US Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory to demonstrate the feasib...
The first cryogenic feedbox designed to supply electricity to the superconducting magnets for one of eight arcs has been installed at Point 8 of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).