JEFFERSON LAB SEARCH
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12/12/19 Update: Due to impending inclement weather, the ARTech Lights event has been postponed. Newport News anticipates announcing a new date for the event in early 2020. See the links below for more information.
Join Jefferson Lab and other local science and technology institutions at Brooks Crossing on Friday, Dec. 13, as we light the night with free and fun STEM activities
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Simonetta Liuti is recognized for her inexhaustible dedication to femtography research and guiding the next generation of physicists
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Jefferson Lab hosted 14 teams from across Virginia during the annual Middle School Science Bowl on Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020
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Members of the media and public are invited to observe the 2020 Virginia Regional Middle School Science Bowl Competition at Jefferson Lab on Saturday, Feb. 29
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In the first direct probes of the core of the nuclear interaction, researchers find that leading theories on interactions between protons and neutrons describe them well, even in conditions where the protons and neutrons strongly overlap, such as in neutron stars
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Andrei Seryi has been named a Governor’s Distinguished CEBAF Professor
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V3 Program achievement affirms the lab’s commitment to actively recruit military veterans of all stripes to join its workforce
NEWPORT NEWS, VA – The management and operations contractor of the Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility has achieved the Virginia Values Veterans (V3) certification, awarded by the Commonwealth of Virginia to private employers committed to recruiting, hiring, training and retaining veterans. With this certification, Jefferson Science Associates, LLC, has affirmed its commitment to the recruitment of veterans.
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Revamping infrastructure to improve lab operations; delivering significant project savings four months ahead of schedule.
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Jefferson Lab has been awarded the Department of Energy 2018 Outstanding Security Professional of the Year-Contractor award for improving lab security and furthering best practice safeguard initiatives.
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Correlated Nucleons May Solve 35-Year-Old Mystery
Guided by data from new high-precision measurements, physicists develop a universal function that suggests that proton-neutron pairs in the nucleus may be responsible for the EMC Effect.