Read article 'LHC and Planck: where two ends meet'
LHC and Planck: where two ends meet
Links between research at opposite ends of the distance scale.
Thank you for registering
If you'd like to change your details at any time, please visit My account
Read article 'LHC and Planck: where two ends meet'
Links between research at opposite ends of the distance scale.
Read article 'Dark Energy'
The first volume in the Peking University–World Scientific Advance Physics Series, this book introduces the current state of research on dark energy.
Read article 'ATLAS gives new limits in the search for dark matter'
There is evidence for dark matter from many astronomical observations, yet so far, dark matter has not been seen in particle-physics experiments, and there is no evidence for non-gravitational interac...
Read article 'A bright future for dark-matter searches'
The US Department of Energy Office of High Energy Physics and the National Science Foundation Physics Division have announced their joint programme for second-generation dark-matter experiments, aimin...
Read article 'IAXO: the International Axion Observatory'
A large superconducting magnet could cast light on the dark universe.
Read article 'Higgs and top: a new window on dark matter'
With the discovery of a Higgs boson at the LHC two years ago, the last piece of the Standard Model puzzle fell into place. Yet, several mysteries remain, one of which is the enigma of the origin of da...
Read article 'CDMS puts new constraints on dark-matter particles'
While it is now generally accepted that dark matter makes up the majority of the mass in the universe, little is known about what it is.
Read article 'First results from LUX on dark matter'
The collaboration that built and runs the Large Underground Xenon (LUX) experiment, operating in the Sanford Underground Research Laboratory, has released its first results in the search for weakly in...
Read article 'Enlightening the dark'
Read article 'CMS hunts for low-mass dark matter'
Astronomical observations – such as the rotation velocities of galaxies and gravitational lensing – show that more than 80% of the matter in the universe remains invisible.