Office of High Energy Physics

High Energy Physics explores the most fundamental questions about the nature of the universe. The Office of High Energy Physics supports a program focused on three frontiers of scientific discovery. At the energy frontier, powerful accelerators investigate the constituents and architecture of the universe. At the intensity frontier, astronomically large amounts of particles and highly sensitive detectors offer a second, unique pathway to investigate rare events in nature. At the cosmic frontier, natural sources of particles from space reveal the nature of the universe. Together these three interrelated discovery frontiers create a complete picture, advancing Department of Energy missions through the development of key cutting-edge technologies and the training of future generations of scientists.

Announcements

September 12, 2008

DOE and NASA announce the opening of a new public website for the Joint Dark Energy Mission (JDEM), a joint NASA/DOE space-based mission to investigate dark energy. The website will provide all public information and plans regarding the mission. The agencies also announced the formation of a Science Coordination Group to aid in establishing preliminary science requirements for a JDEM facility. Please see http://jdem.gsfc.nasa.gov for detailed information.

September 11, 2008

Success of the Large Hadron Collider PHysics program depends critically on using computing facilities all of over the world, linked by complex software infrastructure. The LHC community celebrates the deployment of this infrastructure called Grid Computing at GRIDFEST.

Announcements Archive

Research Areas

 Proton Accelerator-Based Physics Electron Accelerator-Based Physics Non-Accelerator-Based Physics Theoretical Physics Advanced Technology R&D

Features

symmetry symmetry image

Secrets of the Pyramids

March/April 2008

In a boon for archaeology, particle physicists plan to probe ancient structures for tombs and other hidden chambers. The key to the technology is the muon, a cousin of the electron that rains harmlessly from the sky.
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Adam Yurkewicz US/LHC

US/LHC Blogs

June 6, 2008

Collaborating across an ocean
While we use many collaborative tools to work together across the ocean, there is something qualitatively different about sitting down for a conversation over coffee....
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