The successes of the Large Hadron Collider just keep coming. This time, physicists have concocted quark-gluon plasma, the fiery brew of particles created just milliseconds after the Big Bang.
Scientists have used a novel approach merging quantum mechanics and general relativity to identify the legendary “glueball,” a particle theorized to be made of pure nuclear force.
The Large Hadron Collider adds another notch to its belt of triumphs: this time, evidence that particles and antiparticles display symmetry in response to the fundamental laws of physics.
Using tools from the Large Hadron Collider, scientists have designed a machine that translates interstellar radiation in music, effectively capturing the melodies of the stars.