JEFFERSON LAB SEARCH

(Show results from this date)
(Show results to this date)
*Use spaces between key words, no punctuation needed *Sign In for authenticated content

  • The Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF) will formalize a partnership with the Center for Innovative Technology (CIT) at 1:30 p.m. January 17, 1996, at CEBAF.

    CIT, based in Herndon, VA, will market CEBAF inventions to industry. This will include establishing specific working relationships and programs between CEBAF, industry and CIT to best achieve technology transfer.

  • The Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility, the newest national research laboratory, successfully began conducting experiments this week. One hundred scientists from across the globe are collaborating with CEBAF to conduct the first in a series of experiments that are expected to lead to a solution to the ancient puzzle of the fundamental structure of matter.

  • Twenty-nine high school and middle school physics, physical science, and engineering/technology teachers from four states are participating in the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility's Summer Institute for Teacher Enhancement (SITE).

    The four week Institute enables teachers to conduct practical and essential group research on a variety of projects at CEBAF including: Data analysis, construction and operation of safety systems, and control system design.

  • The Department of Energy's FY 1997 budget, released today leaves CEBAF's Budgetary outlook for the fiscal year beginning October 1, 1996 in good order. One of the highlights of the Department of Energy's Office of Energy Research budget is to sustain the High Energy and Nuclear Physics programs under which CEBAF's effort is directed.

  • U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu delivers his keynote address at Jefferson Lab's 25th anniversary celebration. Listening (l-r) are: Jefferson Lab Director Hugh Montgomery; Jerry Draayer, president  and CEO of the Southeastern Universities Research Association; J. Dirk Walecka, Jefferson Lab's first scientific director; and Berthold Schoch, a University of Bonn physics professor. Photo: Greg Adams

  • Date: Monday, Nov. 26, 2012

    Time: The signing will take place at 2:30 p.m.

    Place: CEBAF Center at Jefferson Lab, 12000 Jefferson Avenue, Newport News, VA 23606

  • Secretary of Commerce and Trade, Barry E. DuVal and the Center for Innovative Technology (CIT) today announced the selection of a second new innovation center - The Center for Plasma and Photon Processing to advance the use of intelligent processes to control energy to create materials, structures and devices. As part of the Jefferson Center for Research and Technology, CIT's new Technology Innovation Center will share in the impact of 4200 jobs and $160 million.

  • NEWPORT NEWS, VA – Research performed at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility has found that protons are about 20 times more likely to pair up with neutrons than with other protons in the nucleus. The result will be published online by the journal Science, at the Science Express website.

    Correlated protons and neutrons were measured in the BigBite large acceptance spectrometer (blue/gold magnet with detector package) and a neutron detector (tall assembly at right).

  • NEWPORT NEWS, Va. – The U.S. Department of Energy's Jefferson Lab invites the public to an evening of Fun With Astronomy on Tuesday, Oct. 14.

  • NEWPORT NEWS, VA. – New theory work at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility has shown that more than half of the spin of the proton is the result of the movement of its building blocks: quarks. The result, published in the Sept. 5 issue of Physical Review Letters, agrees with recent experiments and supercomputer calculations.