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   PHYSICS : SUPERCOLLIDERS
News Resources Bibliography
Collision Course: Beating Moore's Law by 2006 will take teamwork -- Neil McAllister  -- San Francisco Gate  -- February 14, 2002

CERN researchers are turning to "Grid Computing" to achieve their goal of a "thousand times more computing power by 2006." They are developing the distributed-computing network to help process the 10 petabytes of data likely to be generated by the Large Hadron Supercollider.

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Scientists Expect To "See" Miniature Black Holes -- Staff  -- Spacedaily  -- November 02, 2001

Scientists are speculating that black holes could be produced in high-energy collisions of particles in particle accelerators.

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US group calls for new linear collider -- Peter Gwynne  -- PhysicsWeb  -- October 31, 2001

A working group charged with charting the next quarter-century of United States particle physics has called for the country to give highest priority to ‘a high-energy, high-luminosity electron-positron linear collider, wherever it is built in the world.’

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Convocation at Snowmass Looks into the Future of US High-Energy Physics -- Bertram Schwarzschild  -- Physics Today  -- September 01, 2001

A convention of 1,000 physicists at Snowmass in Colorado discussed the possibility of a 500-GeV electron-positron linear collider which they believe should be the next big supercollider.

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Raw energy: The latest on the high-energy particle accelerator -- Peter Spotts  -- Christian Science Monitor  -- August 23, 2001

Physicists from around the world are calling for a new linear collider to help answer questions that lie on the frontier of physics and cosmology.

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Secrets of the Atom Revealed -- Jeffrey Benner  -- Wired News  -- July 27, 2001

Scientists at the Fermilab in Illinois, home to the world's most powerful atom smasher, announced Wednesday that data collected during the last big round of experiments into the depths of the atom is now available online.

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Particle Physicists Plan the Next Big Thing -- James Glanz  -- New York Times  -- July 10, 2001

The directors of major physics laboratories in Europe, the United States and Japan gathered this week to make plans for a new particle accelerator they all agreed would be so large, powerful and expensive that it could be built only if they all cooperated on a scale without parallel in scientific history.

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US team steps up search for elusive particle -- David Whitehouse  -- BBC News  -- April 09, 2001

Physicists at Fermilab in the US have seen the first collisions in their new series of experiments with the Tevatron, the world's highest-energy particle accelerator. They are continuing the search for the elusive but important particle known as the Higgs boson, the particle that endows others with mass.

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Physicists Proposing New U.S. Linear Particle Collider -- Michael Purdy  -- Unisci  -- March 16, 2001

High-energy physicists from across the United States are meeting to consider and refine a proposal for a major new U.S. particle collider, the Electron-Positron Linear Collider. Many believe such a collider could help confirm a theory known as supersymmetry, resolving many of the unanswered questions in their present understanding of elementary particles and the forces that act on them.

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Big Bang Scientists Get Dense -- Diana Michele Yap  -- Wired News  -- January 22, 2001

Scientists from the Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory announced that its new particle accelerator, the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, had created the highest density of matter ever made in an experiment.

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