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Theoretical physicist Michio Kaku explains the larger implications of the God Particle's discovery.

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The 'God particle': Have we found it?updated: Wed Jul 04 2012 07:21:00

Physicist Martin Archer discusses evidence that the so-called "God particle" actually exists.

Faster than the speed of light?updated: Sat Sep 24 2011 00:32:00

CNN's Atika Shubert reports on the possible discovery of a particle able to travel faster than the speed of light.

Scientists: Particles appear to travel faster than lightupdated: Sat Sep 24 2011 00:32:00

Scientists in Switzerland say an experiment appears to show that tiny particles traveled faster than the speed of light -- a result that would seem to defy the laws of nature.

2010: World's biggest science experimentupdated: Fri Sep 23 2011 12:24:00

Motherboard.tv visits the Large Hadron Collider, the world's biggest, most expensive and most feared science experiment.

The world's biggest telescopeupdated: Thu Jun 02 2011 14:50:00

Motherboard.tv gets a close-up look at the largest telescope on Earth and meets the scientists behind it.

The biggest telescope on Earth reveals the universe's farthest reachesupdated: Thu Jun 02 2011 14:50:00

From a quiet swath of English countryside, some one and a half hours outside of London, researchers are receiving radio messages from the farthest reaches of the universe.

World's largest particle accelerator offers window into laws of natureupdated: Tue May 17 2011 11:31:00

Geneva may have given the world precision watches, but its biggest contribution to humanity is a giant time machine.

Looking for the 'God particle'updated: Fri Apr 08 2011 16:49:00

U.S. physicists may have found new particle or natural force. Science expert Bill Nye talks about what it all means.

Is it a new particle, or just a fluke?updated: Fri Apr 08 2011 16:49:00

In the search for answers to some of the most mysterious and fundamental questions about the the universe, Europe's $10 billion particle-smashing Large Hadron Collider has been hogging the spotlight in recent years.

Scientists capture antimatter atoms in particle breakthroughupdated: Thu Nov 18 2010 12:21:00

Scientists have captured antimatter atoms for the first time, a breakthrough that could eventually help us to understand the nature and origins of the universe.

Epic collision brings scientists closer to grasping universe's originsupdated: Mon Nov 08 2010 21:14:00

Scientists say they are a step closer to recreating the conditions at the birth of the universe and to understanding life as we know it, after the successful collision of heavy lead ions in a massive machine in Europe.

Hubble's 20th anniversaryupdated: Mon Apr 26 2010 18:37:00

A former astronaut and a NASA administrator recount the successful history of the Hubble Space Telescope.

Hubble marks 20 years in spaceupdated: Mon Apr 26 2010 18:37:00

For 20 years, it has circled quietly above us, capturing a dark, secret world billions of light years away.

Hadron Collider breakthrough as beams collideupdated: Tue Mar 30 2010 07:42:00

Scientists at the Large Hadron Collider managed to make two proton beams collide at high energy Tuesday, marking a "new territory" in physics, according to CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research.

Particle collider's woesupdated: Tue Mar 30 2010 07:42:00

As the CERN Particle Collider is set to increase energy, CNN's Atika Shubert looks at some of the machine's problems.

Search for 'God particle'updated: Mon Nov 23 2009 16:18:00

Is the Large Hadron Collider being sabotaged from the future? Or merely by birds? CNN.com's Elizabeth Landau reports.

Large Hadron Collider back onlineupdated: Mon Nov 23 2009 16:18:00

"The LHC is back," the European Organization for Nuclear Research announced triumphantly Friday, as the world's largest particle accelerator resumed operation more than a year after an electrical failure shut it down.

Huge $10 billion collider resumes hunt for 'God particle'updated: Thu Nov 12 2009 10:17:00

Is the Large Hadron Collider being sabotaged from the future? Or merely by birds?

Physicist held in France over 'terror links'updated: Fri Oct 09 2009 18:12:00

A man arrested in France on suspicion of links to terrorist organizations is a physicist who was working with the agency known for being home of the Large Hadron Collider -- the world's most powerful particle accelerator.

Big Bang machine detectors will be 'even more perfect'updated: Tue Apr 28 2009 12:04:00

On a recent episode of "South Park," Mr. Marsh steals a particle accelerator magnet so his son, Stan, can win the Pinewood Derby. The magnet's power results in an alien encounter, and chaos ensues.

Falling into a black holeupdated: Mon Apr 27 2009 08:14:00

A computer simulation illustrates what it would be like to fall into a black hole. Narrated by Andrew Hamilton.

Astronomers take virtual plunge into black holeupdated: Mon Apr 27 2009 08:14:00

Dare to fall into a black hole and you would get vaporized in what is probably the most violent place in the universe. But the journey would yield some amazing sights, though you might need three eyes for the best view of what's going on, new research suggests.

Multibillion-dollar collider to probe nature's mysteriesupdated: Wed Apr 15 2009 17:05:00

Deep underground on the border between France and Switzerland, the world's largest particle accelerator complex will explore the world on smaller scales than any human invention has explored before.

Mysteries of universeupdated: Wed Apr 15 2009 17:05:00

Groundbreaking science experiment recreates the Big Bang to unlock secrets of the universe. CNN's Atika Shubert reports.

Colliding with nature's best-kept secretsupdated: Tue Apr 14 2009 15:50:00

Visiting a particle accelerator is like a religious experience, at least for Nima Arkani-Hamed.

Scientist: Holographic television to become realityupdated: Tue Jan 13 2009 11:47:00

Picture this: you're sat down for the Football World Cup final, or a long-awaited sequel to the "Sex and the City" movie and you're watching all the action unfold in 3-D on your coffee table.

Black hole found at center of galaxyupdated: Wed Dec 10 2008 05:25:00

German astronomers say they have discovered conclusive proof of a supermassive black hole at the heart of the galaxy.

Time.com: Stephen Hawking to Leave Prestigious Postupdated: Fri Oct 24 2008 13:00:00

Cosmologist Stephen Hawking will retire from his prestigious post at Cambridge University next year, but intends to continue his exploration of time and space

Meet Stephen Hawkingupdated: Fri Oct 24 2008 09:05:00

CNN's Becky Anderson holds an exclusive interview with scientist Stephen Hawking on his views of the world.

Time.com: Shutdown Atom Smasher to Be Back Runningupdated: Fri Oct 17 2008 17:00:00

Damage to the world's largest atom smasher will take much of the planned winter shutdown to repair but it will be back in action as planned next spring, a spokesman for the operator said

Three physicists share Nobel prizeupdated: Tue Oct 07 2008 09:20:00

An American physicist and two physicists from Japan will share this year's Nobel Prize in Physics, the Nobel Foundation announced Tuesday.

Time.com: Why The Large Hadron Collider Is Already On The Fritzupdated: Mon Sep 22 2008 12:00:00

Nine days after the successful test run of the world's largest particle accelerator in Geneva, the machine has been shut down for repairs

Time.com: Supercollider Down Until Next Year?updated: Sun Sep 21 2008 18:00:00

The unique qualities of the world's largest particle collider mean that the meltdown of a small electrical connection could delay its groundbreaking research until next year

The particle experimentupdated: Thu Sep 11 2008 08:15:00

CNN's Becky Anderson goes inside the tunnels of the biggest scientific experiment ever attempted.

Large Hadron Collider fired up in 'God particle' huntupdated: Thu Sep 11 2008 08:15:00

Scientists Wednesday applauded as one of the most ambitious experiments ever conceived got successfully underway, with protons being fired around a 27-kilometer (17-mile) tunnel deep beneath the border of France and Switzerland in an attempt to unlock the secrets of the universe.

Time.com: What the Collider Might Discoverupdated: Wed Sep 10 2008 11:00:00

The world's biggest accelerator fires up (Earth is safe so far) in an effort to unlock some of nature's most enduring mysteries

Time.com: Big Bang Collider Test Successfulupdated: Wed Sep 10 2008 05:00:00

The world's biggest physics experiment has succeeded in its first major test as a beam of protons was successfully fired all the way around a 17-mile tunnel beneath the Swiss-French border.

Time.com: Collider Triggers End-of-World Fearsupdated: Thu Sep 04 2008 22:35:00

Scientists are dismissing critics who warn that the Large Hadron Collider could create Earth-swallowing black holes

Science seranadeupdated: Wed May 21 2008 09:15:00

Dr. Alan Marscher of Boston University performs his song 'Superluminal Lover' at a conference in Miami in 2005.

Professor makes black hole breakthroughs, balladsupdated: Wed May 21 2008 09:15:00

"Attracted by your gravity, your body's so compact / Pulling me inward, prepare for close contact," Boston University astronomer Alan Marscher sings in his song about a deep-space object known as a black hole.

Time.com: Higgs Boson: A Ghost in the Machineupdated: Wed Apr 09 2008 09:00:00

A giant accelerator searches for a tiny and elusive particle that is key to understanding the origins of the universe

Time.com: 'God Particle' Expected to Be Found Soonupdated: Tue Apr 08 2008 15:00:00

The father of a theoretical subatomic particle dubbed "the God particle" says he's almost sure it will be confirmed in the next year in a race between powerful research equipment in the United States and Europe

Dangers from secrets and liesupdated: Mon Feb 04 2008 09:55:00

If you know a secret the rest of the world doesn't, it can drive you nuts. From dealing with little white lies to exposing a sexual harasser, consider how, when -- and when not -- to let the cat out of the bag.

A hole lot of nothing found by astronomersupdated: Thu Aug 23 2007 22:28:00

Astronomers have stumbled upon a tremendous hole in the universe. That's got them scratching their heads about what's just not there.

5 of the largest, oddest and most useless state projects updated: Fri Jul 27 2007 00:53:00

1. Dumb as a limestone brick: Indiana's misguided bid for tourists

Black hole triplets spotted updated: Thu Jan 11 2007 11:50:00

The discovery of three distant supermassive black holes in proximity to one another is giving astronomers a glimpse into the chaotic early years of the universe.

The insider's guide to nuclear fusionupdated: Thu Nov 23 2006 03:32:00

The European Union, along with six other nations have signed a €10 billion (US$12.8 billion) pact to build the world's most advanced nuclear fusion reactor aimed at developing a cheaper, cleaner and safer energy source to replace fossil fuels. We tell you what you need to know about the deal.

Subterranean secrets of the Universeupdated: Tue Nov 21 2006 09:58:00

In a cosmic-sized cavern 100 meters beneath the French-Swiss border, scientists from around the globe are making final preparations for the largest experiment the world has ever seen in an attempt to unearth the origins of the Universe.

Business 2.0: The Next Disruptorsupdated: Thu Nov 09 2006 09:50:00

"What use could this company make of an electrical toy?"

Fortune: Zapping cancer cellsupdated: Mon Nov 06 2006 15:32:00

It's called a gantry, and it's downright eerie. An assemblage of steel and cables mounted some 16 feet above the floor of a concrete chamber, it's more than 30 feet in length and width, with ends bracketed by 17-foot steel wheels resting on double rollers. The gantry weighs 190 tons, about as much as a diesel locomotive, but when it begins to revolve there is neither creak nor hum. As it rolls counterclockwise a bit past the halfway point, stops, returns to center, and then rotates the other way, it could be a "Star Wars" battle cruiser maneuvering soundlessly in space.

Universe might be pill-shapedupdated: Mon Oct 09 2006 14:44:00

Instead of being perfectly round like a globe, the universe might be a bit stretched in shape like a pill.

Business 2.0: Disrupting deathupdated: Fri Sep 15 2006 16:33:00

The Disruptor: NanoLife Sciences

Scientists: Dark matter existsupdated: Mon Aug 21 2006 13:48:00

New observations of a great big cosmic collision provide the best evidence yet that invisible and mysterious dark matter really does exist.

Can this machine rescue physics?updated: Thu Aug 17 2006 11:50:00

When the world's biggest particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, opens next year near Geneva, the focal point of the high-energy physics world will shift from U.S. soil for the first time in half a century. But America's brightest are busy devising a rescue plan.

Fortune: Quantum leapupdated: Tue Aug 01 2006 13:21:00

She awakes early on the morning of April 10, 2030, in the capable hands of her suburban Chicago apartment. All night, microscopic sensors in her bedside tables have monitored her breathing, heart r...

Fortune: Quantum leapupdated: Wed Jul 26 2006 11:55:00

She awakes early on the morning of April 10, 2030, in the capable hands of her suburban Chicago apartment. All night, microscopic sensors in her bedside tables have monitored her breathing, heart rate, and brain activity.

Black hole findings yield new mysteriesupdated: Mon Jul 10 2006 12:59:00

Until recently, black holes have remained hidden beneath invisibility cloaks. Whereas a lot has been known about the existence and properties of black holes from Einstein's theory of general relativity, tangible evidence has been a recent phenomenon.

Black holes are actually 'green'updated: Mon Apr 24 2006 14:06:00

A new study finds that supermassive black holes, located at the heart of some galaxies, are the most fuel efficient engines in the universe.

Pair of black holes locked in death danceupdated: Thu Apr 06 2006 14:05:00

Two supermassive black holes have been found to be spiraling toward a merger, astronomers said today.

Doctor projects beams of hopeupdated: Tue Sep 06 2005 16:26:00

Had he followed in his mother's footsteps, Dr. Herman D. Suit might today be breaking horses. But long ago, he traded the wide open, dusty plains of west Texas for the narrow brick canyons of Boston's West End and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH).

Physics' sharpest mind since Einsteinupdated: Mon Jun 27 2005 08:10:00

It is a century since Albert Einstein laid the foundations of modern physics, and 50 years since the death of the man considered by many to have possessed the greatest mind in science.

Nearby evidence for dark energy updated: Tue Mar 22 2005 12:08:00

New research suggests evidence of dark energy in our cosmic backyard, but theorists are still divided on explanations for the ever-increasing speed with which the universe is expanding.

Astronomers: 'Dark' galaxy discovered updated: Thu Feb 24 2005 14:06:00

Astronomers have discovered an invisible galaxy that could be the first of many that will help unravel one of the universe's greatest mysteries.

Origin of magnetarsupdated: Tue Feb 01 2005 13:34:00

If a magnetar flew past Earth within 100,000 miles, the intense magnetic field of the exotic object would destroy the data on every credit card on the planet.

Blazing speed: The fastest stuff in the universeupdated: Tue Jan 18 2005 10:52:00

If you're light, it's fairly easy to travel at your own speed -- that is to say 186,282 miles per second or 299,800 kilometers per second.

Space explosion creates giant bubbles updated: Wed Jan 05 2005 15:47:00

The largest explosion ever seen in space reveals black holes to be more influential than expected, perhaps sometimes stifling star formation in a galaxy while gobbling up trillions upon trillions of tons of gas.

Enormous black holes formed in early universeupdated: Tue Nov 23 2004 10:23:00

Incredibly massive black holes had fully matured just a billion years after the birth of the universe, according to two separate studies.

What a drag! Earth warps space surrounding itupdated: Thu Oct 21 2004 15:29:00

Earth's spin warps space around the planet, according to a new study that confirms a key prediction of Einstein's general theory of relativity.

Fortune: Quantum Businessupdated: Mon Oct 04 2004 00:01:00

There has been a tremendous amount of interest lately in Albert Einstein, on the event of the 100th anniversary of the publication of his important paper on Brownian motion, which proves the existe...

Galaxies collide with stellar bangupdated: Fri Sep 24 2004 08:55:00

Astronomers have found what they are calling the perfect cosmic storm, a galaxy cluster pile-up so powerful its energy output is second only to the Big Bang.

Business 2.0: Quantum Leap THE WORLD'S BIGGEST R&D LABS ARE RACING TO BUILD A QUANTUM COMPUTER. GEORDIE ROSE THINKS HE CAN BEAT THEM. IS Hupdated: Sun Aug 01 2004 00:01:00

The most powerful modern computers are no match for Mother Nature. Those silicon weaklings can hardly predict the weather, let alone mimic the workings of the human brain. Give them a task as simpl...

Black hole possibly caught in creationupdated: Thu Jun 10 2004 15:58:00

Startled astronomers peered through an apparent crack in the expanding bubble from an exploded star to glimpse what may be the youngest black hole ever detected.

New middle-weight black hole fighting forceupdated: Tue Jun 08 2004 08:49:00

Astronomers have found what appears to be a black hole 25 to 40 times the mass of our sun, a weight class not previously known to exist.

FSB: Wine 2.0 A small Napa winery uses high-tech aerial cameras to tend its vines. Result? Robust yields.updated: Tue Jun 01 2004 00:01:00

Ah, the legendary romance of winemaking. Apple-cheeked peasant girls treading grapes under a harvest moon. Intimate tastings. And, of course, multispectral imaging and neutron probes. Huh?

Black holes multiply in new observationsupdated: Mon May 31 2004 11:16:00

European researchers have found 30 previously hidden supermassive black holes anchoring faraway galaxies, which suggests there at least twice as many of the colossal gravity wells as thought.

Dimmest galaxy may illuminate dark matterupdated: Mon May 31 2004 10:08:00

As galaxies go, Andromeda IX is a mighty dim bulb.

Chandra unlocking mystery of 'dark energy'updated: Tue May 18 2004 15:20:00

The Chandra Space Telescope has gathered further evidence the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate, scientists at NASA and Britain's Institute of Astronomy announced Tuesday. The finding sheds new light on a force known as "dark energy."

Will nanotech save the world or is it mostly hype?updated: Thu Apr 15 2004 16:36:00

Nanotechnology is often mentioned as the tool that will dramatically alter the future.

Colliding stars may create black holes updated: Wed Apr 14 2004 15:04:00

Fantastic collisions between two massive stars huddled in a cluster could fuel a series of mergers creating a black hole known as a middleweight.

Stars near sun wild, waywardupdated: Tue Apr 06 2004 16:40:00

A new survey of stars near the sun reveals a wild and crazy past in which wanderers arrived from all directions under the gravitational influences of black holes, clouds of gas and invading galaxies.

Black holes crowd heart of next galaxyupdated: Tue Mar 30 2004 12:10:00

Using a new technique astronomers have found 10 apparent black holes near the center of the Andromeda galaxy, the nearest large spiral galaxy to our own.

Black holes: Fuzzy tangles of strings?updated: Wed Mar 03 2004 08:27:00

Black holes may not be the smooth, featureless gravitational gluttons long thought to completely devour any matter or information that strays too close.

Star caught devouring companionupdated: Tue Feb 24 2004 14:03:00

Scientists have obtained a rare glimpse of the chaotic environment just miles from the surface of an explosive corpse of a star that is slowly consuming its companion.

Black hole seen ripping star apartupdated: Wed Feb 18 2004 14:05:00

Black holes will eat just about anything, and now astronomers have confirmed that stars are on their menus.

Fortune: Detecting The Danger Within Cutting-edge technology from dozens of companies is helping America counter a worst-case terrorist tupdated: Mon Feb 17 2003 00:01:00

One day last August a U.S. Customs inspector in Miami studying an X-ray image of a cargo container just in from the Middle East saw something that gave him pause. The image, made as part of a routi...

Fortune: Can Corning Find Its Optic Nerve?updated: Mon Mar 19 2001 00:01:00

It starts as a glass cylinder of unimaginable purity, formed by heating an exotic blend of silica and germania to temperatures exceeding 1,200 degrees centigrade. This mother lode--shaped like a gi...

Money Magazine: Ready to Blow Optical stocks are on fire. But how long can it last?updated: Sun Oct 01 2000 00:01:00

So you want to play in the scorching-hot optical networking space? Here's a suggestion from Merrill Lynch's crew: "Tighten up your seat belts, keep a paper bag handy and hang on for the ride." That...

Fortune: What's Cooking in the Chem Labs? In an accelerated hunt for industry's blockbuster new materials, researchers are using radical updated: Mon Apr 17 2000 00:01:00

Never has industry had a greater stake in the process of inventing and producing materials that are the flesh of new technology. Stuff like semiconductors, optical fibers, metallic alloys, and poly...

Money Magazine: FIVE STOCKS TO BUY--BUT NOT JUST YETupdated: Mon Dec 01 1997 00:01:00

No one likes to think about a stock market correction. And maybe no one has to for now; after all, the law of inertia, a.k.a. Newton's first law of motion, says objects in motion tend to stay in mo...

Fortune: AMERICA'S HOT YOUNG SCIENTISTSupdated: Mon Oct 08 1990 00:01:00

SOMETIMES THE U.S. underestimates its own strength. In this age of increasing global competition, American science still sets the pace. According to the National Science Foundation, Americans inves...

Fortune: THE WORLD'S NEXT SOURCE OF WEALTHupdated: Mon Aug 28 1989 00:01:00

We all think we know about the computer revolution. But not many of us understand how it happened -- that it resulted from discoveries about the very essence of matter, profound revelations that mo...

Fortune: FUSION'S FUTURE: IT AIN'T DEAD YET Despite much-publicized problems, the dream of almost unlimited cheap power could someday comupdated: Mon Jun 05 1989 00:01:00

WHY IS this scientist smiling? Because he may have won a small prize in the cold fusion lottery. No, not those $25 boxes of pennies -- the pennies are there to shield his instruments from any gamma...

Fortune: A QUANTUM LEAP IN ELECTRONICS A famous and paradoxical theory of modern physics may set off a transformation as profound as the updated: Mon Jan 30 1989 00:01:00

WHAT you're seeing in the photograph at right is a practical embodiment of one of man's most brilliant intellectual achievements. The tiny semiconductor laser in the palm of the scientist's hand is...

Fortune: PHYSICS WHIZ GOES INTO BIZ At 28, MacArthur Foundation genius Stephen Wolfram may be the most promising physicist to appear in yupdated: Mon Apr 11 1988 00:01:00

RARELY DO conventional people produce innovation in business or technology. Almost invariably, innovators have a wild gleam in their eye, metaphorically if not literally -- and they can be a real h...

Fortune: THE GOOD NEWS ABOUT U.S. R&D It still leads the world, although Japan and Germany are coming on strong. Maintaining the edgeupdated: Mon Feb 01 1988 00:01:00

SCIENCE BESPEAKS power, both military and economic. The U.S. has long had the most productive scientific establishment in the world: Since the explosion of the first atomic bomb in the New Mexico d...

Fortune: THE NEW LOOK AT AMERICA'S TOP LAB How has Bell Labs weathered the breakup of AT&T? Surprisingly well. Basic research still tupdated: Mon Feb 01 1988 00:01:00

WHEN AT&T was broken up on January 1, 1984, admirers of Ma Bell's deep commitment to research wondered about the fate of AT&T Bell Laboratories -- the great American invention factory. Bell Labs ha...

Fortune: J. GEORG BEDNORZ AND K. ALEX MULLER IBM SETS OFF THE STAMPEDE TO SUPERCONDUCTINGupdated: Mon Jan 04 1988 00:01:00

TWO PHYSICISTS, working in a modest Swiss hilltop laboratory in 1986, made a breakthrough that may change the world. They discovered how to give certain substances properties that could make possib...

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