applicationContext = Production

Research at the Max Planck Institute for Physics

The Max Planck Institute for Physics in Munich is one of the world’s leading research institutions for particle physics. Here, scientists study the smallest building blocks of matter and how they interact. Theory and experiment work hand in hand. The physicists at the Institute develop and test theoretical models as the basis for experiments with the aim of solving the mysteries of the universe: for example, what dark matter consists of and why antimatter no longer exists.

Structure of matter

Standard Model - dark energy - supersymmetry - building blocks of matter - particle collisions

Structure of matter

Standard Model - dark energy - supersymmetry - building blocks of matter - particle collisions

New technologies

Accelerator and detector technologies - linear accelerators - acceleration with plasma waves - germanium detectors

New technologies

Accelerator and detector technologies - linear accelerators - acceleration with plasma waves - germanium detectors

Recent publications

Publications in 2019 and 2020

Search response: 368 publications match your query. Listing starts with latest publication first: (1 - 2)

MPP-2020-113 Measurements of $WH$ and $ZH$ production in the $H \rightarrow b\bar{b}$ decay channel in $pp$ collisions at 13 TeV with the ATLAS detector, ATLAS Collaboration, arxiv:2007.02873 (abs), (pdf), (ps), CERN-EP-2020-087, inSPIRE entry.
[ATLAS], [Article]

MPP-2020-112 Measurement of single top-quark production in association with a $W$ boson in the single-lepton channel at $\sqrt{s} = 8$ TeV with the ATLAS detector, ATLAS Collaboration, arxiv:2007.01554 (abs), (pdf), (ps), CERN-EP-2019-221, inSPIRE entry.
[ATLAS], [Article]