ATLAS Blog

Boost and never look back!

Boost and never look back

12th August 2015When I arrived in Chicago this last Sunday for the BOOST conference I had a pretty good idea what new results we were going to show from ATLAS. I also had some rough ideas of what our friends from the other experiments and theory groups would be up to. What I didn’t expect was to see an ad that would fit the conference so nicely!

Read more →
ATLAS control room

A summer evening in the ATLAS control room

4th August 2015The sun has already set over Geneva when I finally walk out from the ATLAS control room. We have been waiting for beams to be injected into the machine since the early hours of the afternoon, but without much success so far. Just a regular day for the most ambitious particle accelerator mankind has ever built, but a pretty boring afternoon for our entire shift crew.

Read more →
ATLAS Overview Week in Marrakech in 2013

From ATLAS Around the World: Brief history of Morocco in ATLAS

31st July 2015In 1996, Morocco officially became a member of the ATLAS collaboration. The eagerly awaited day had finally arrived, and the first Arabic and African country signed a collaborative agreement with CERN to participate in the great scientific adventure of particle physics.

Read more →
Murrough Landon and Manuel discussing results from the beam splashes

From ATLAS Around the World: Triggers (and dark) matter

27th July 2015To the best of our knowledge, it took the Universe about 13.798 billion years to allow funny looking condensates of mostly oxygen, carbon and hydrogen to ponder on their own existence. Some particularly curious specimens became scientists, founded CERN, dug several rings into the ground near Geneva, Switzerland, built the Large Hadron Collider, and also installed a handful of large detectors along the way.

Read more →
Workers assembling the ATLAS SemiConductor Tracker

From ATLAS Around the World: Working with silicon in Japan

3rd July 2015I joined the ATLAS experiment in 2012 after graduating from the University of Tokyo, however my previous experience was completely different from collider physics. During my Master’s course, I focused on the behaviour of a kind of silicon detector operated in Geiger mode. At that time, the experiments at CERN looked like a “castle” to me.

Read more →

From ATLAS Around the World: Faster and faster!

24th June 2015 – Faster and Faster! This is how it gets as soon as LS1 ends and the first collisions of LHC Run 2 approaches. As you might have noticed, at particle physics experiments we LOVE acronyms! LS1 stands for the first Long Shutdown of the Large Hadron Collider.

Read more →
<Serkant|Bosphorus|Erkcan>

From ATLAS Around the World: The oldest observer state of CERN is no longer just observing!

26th May 2015If you have ever been to a bazaar in Turkey, you would know that you have to bargain hard and you have to carefully examine what you buy. Sometimes this attitude goes way too far. In our case about half a century… Turkey had been an observer state of CERN since 1961 but as of 6 May 2015.  

Read more →
The humble telescope I used at high school pointed me both to the past and to the future

From ATLAS Around the World: First blog from Hong Kong

19th May 2015Guess who ATLAS’ youngest member is? It’s Hong Kong! We will be celebrating our first birthday in June, 2015. The Hong Kong ATLAS team comprises members from The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), The University of Hong Kong (HKU) and The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST), under the the Joint Consortium for Fundamental Physics.

Read more →

From ATLAS Around the World: African horizons

8th May 2015 – It’s great being back at CERN and being able to immerse myself in the tangible atmosphere of excited anticipation for the first collisions at 13 TeV this June. I am a South African, usually based in Durban — a city currently afflicted with xenophobically motivated riots and rolling blackouts. Being at CERN is really a different world right now, to a greater extent than usual.

Read more →
All the CoEPP workshop attendees outside MONA, Hobart.

From ATLAS Around the World: A view from Down Under

16th April 2015While ATLAS members at CERN were preparing for Run 2 during ATLAS week, and eagerly awaiting the beam to re-circulate the LHC, colleagues “down under” in Australia were having a meeting of their own. The ARC Centre of Excellence for Particle Physics at the Terascale (CoEPP) is the hub of all things ATLAS in Australia.

Read more →

Pages