Read article 'Antonino Pullia 1935–2020'
Antonino Pullia 1935–2020
He devoted himself to teaching, administration and the rich physics research programmes at the INFN and the universities of Milan and Milano-Bicocca.
Thank you for registering
If you'd like to change your details at any time, please visit My account
Read article 'Antonino Pullia 1935–2020'
He devoted himself to teaching, administration and the rich physics research programmes at the INFN and the universities of Milan and Milano-Bicocca.
Read article 'Teresa Rodrigo Anoro 1956–2020'
She was a leading figure within the particle-physics community, and promoted the participation of women in science.
Read article 'Danila Tlisov 1983–2020'
The CMS collaborator passed away at just 36, from complications due to COVID-19.
Read article 'Ronald Fortune: 1929-2019'
Ronald Fortune was an experimental physicist, who joined CERN’s first nuclear research group in January 1956.
Read article 'John Flanagan 1964–2020'
Accelerator physicist John Flanagan, who made important contributions to the KEKB and SuperKEKB projects in Japan, passed away on 13 March.
Read article 'LHCb hosts Guido Altarelli awards'
Pier Francesco Monni and Philip Ilten were recognised for their exceptional contributions to the theoretical and experimental aspects of deep inelastic scattering.
Read article 'EPS announces 2020 accelerator awards'
The EPS-AG prizes are awarded every three years for outstanding achievements in the accelerator field.
Read article 'Opening doors with a particle-physics PhD'
Transferable skills in communication, teamwork and computing make particle-physics PhDs highly sought after by industry.
Read article 'Fiction, in theory'
French actor Irène Jacob's novel is an intimate portrait of life as the daughter of a renowned theoretical physicist, writes James Gillies.
Read article 'Rolf Widerøe: a giant in the history of accelerators'
Aashild Sørheim's book presents new documentary evidence on the wartime life of an engineer who had a seminal impact on accelerator physics, writes Kurt Hübner.