
Two years of LHC physics: ATLAS takes stock
From the first paper to the dozens of ground-breaking results presented over recent months, the first two years of ATLAS physics have been a hugely productive time.
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From the first paper to the dozens of ground-breaking results presented over recent months, the first two years of ATLAS physics have been a hugely productive time.
While searches with 2011 LHC data for the Higgs and new physics caught the headlines over the summer, detailed studies of 2010 data continue to yield high-precision physics.
About a year ago, the CMS collaboration released its first publication on studies of the top quark.
The global nature of modern particle physics was clearly manifest at the biennial Lepton Photon conference that took place this year in India.
Measurements of top-quark properties were among the many new results shown by the ATLAS collaboration at Lepton-Photon 2011.
The CMS search for the Higgs boson is being carried out using a range of decay products: two photons; two τ leptons; two b quarks; two W bosons; and two Z bosons.
Chris Quigg takes a look at the enduring legacy of Fermilab's proton–antiproton collider.
The CDF collaboration at Fermilab has announced the observation of the Ξ0b, the latest entry in the periodic table of baryons.
The outstanding performance of the LHC enabled the ATLAS and CMS collaborations to report remarkable progress in the hunt for the Higgs boson at EPS-HEP 2011.
A wealth of physics results from ATLAS emerged at EPS-HEP 2011, ranging from detailed measurements of strong and electroweak processes to a spectrum of searches for new physical processes using the fu...