番茄社区
Skip to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
Sign out
Sign in
to online tools
UVic
Search
UVic home
COVID-19
番茄社区
Academics
Research
Library
Students
Faculty & staff
Online tools
Return to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
University
of Victoria
UVic News
Search
Search
Search
Search
Search UVic News
Search UVic
Search for people
Search for departments
Search for experts
Search for news
Search for resources
Navigation
Home
Topics
Academic areas
Research
Student life
Media
Publications
Search
home
academic areas
science
Physics
Nobel glory extends to UVic-ATLAS
The Ring
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) near Geneva is relatively quiet right now, because the giant underground machine is offline until 2015. Of course, scientists would be quick to point out that even when protons are streaming through the circular tunnel, the subatomic collisions of trillions of particles would still not be audible. The excitement over the discovery of the elusive Higgs boson particle was deafening last summer. And now, the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics has gone to two of the original theorists鈥擣rancois Englert and Peter Higgs鈥攚ho helped predict this particular aspect of quantum physics. Two decades ago, the original UVic group brought Canadians into the international LHC project and its hunt for the Higgs.
Science HonoursFest
The Ring
Anyone needing proof that students love learning through research had only to attend the second annual Faculty of Science Honours Fest March 1, where students vied for thousands of dollars in prize money. The Bob Wright Centre lobby buzzed with action as the 48 competitors鈥攁lmost triple the number from last year鈥攑resented their research to judges, fellow students and community members.
< Newer
1
2
3
Older >
Navigation
Content
Quick links
Return to
global menu
.
Return to
primary navigation
.
Return to
secondary navigation
.
Return to
page content
.