Gadget Review on MSN
How the Large Hadron Collider Became the World's Most Advanced Neighborhood Heater
CERN's Large Hadron Collider now heats thousands of French homes with waste heat, turning particle physics research into ...
Using the world's most powerful particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, scientists have found that the quark-gluon ...
The water needed for cooling the Large Hadron Collider at CERN is now being used for heating: it supplies Ferney-Voltaire ...
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) can now chalk up one more use, alongside discovering the Higgs boson and other subatomic particles: heating French homes. With the new thermal recycling system ...
The Unknown on MSN
The Large Hadron Collider explained
What exactly does the Large Hadron Collider do? 😲 Neil deGrasse Tyson explains how this massive machine smashes particles, ...
Could a black hole on Earth ever exist? What would happen if it did? Join Hank Green for a fascinating video about the Large ...
A new heat exchange system between the LHC and the French town of Ferney-Voltaire is directing waste heat energy from CERN's accelerator to warm thousands of homes and businesses.
TDC on MSN
The 10 largest science projects on Earth, from deep sea crawlers to the Large Hadron Collider
From seafloor crawlers and continent-scale earthquake monitors to the most powerful lasers and particle colliders ever built, this video counts down 10 of the world’s largest scientific mega-tools.
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists spot a neutrino 100,000x more powerful than any particle collider
A single subatomic particle that hit Earth in 2023 carried roughly 100,000 times more energy than anything humanity has ever ...
The old fantasy of transforming lead into gold is now a reality, made possible by some wildly inefficient physics at the ...
CERN's ALICE experiment has resolved the puzzle of deuteron formation, showing that most deuterons form via resonance-driven ...
4don MSN
Did we just see a black hole explode? Physicists think so—and it could explain (almost) everything
In 2023, a subatomic particle called a neutrino crashed into Earth with such a high amount of energy that it should have been ...
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