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  click3: Happy birthday, World Wide Web!

Crazy World: Antimatter Might Just Fall Up

When it comes to antimatter, what goes up doesn't necessarily come down. In a new study, physicists weighed antimatter in an effort to determine how this strange cousin of matter interacts with gravity. Full story

First public website turns 20, comes back online — then crashes

Twenty years ago, on April 30, 1993, CERN set the World Wide Web free. In celebration, the research institute relaunched the first webpage, which provides a real blast from the Internet past. Along with the very basic lo-fi design, the site experienced connectivity issues upon its (re) debut, crashi Full story

Captive particles and Dr. Who show physicists are human too

GENEVA (Reuters) - Physicists are deadly serious people, right? Clad in long white coats, they spend their days smashing particles together in the hunt for exotic creatures like quarks and squarks, leptons and sleptons -- and the Higgs Boson. Full story

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Scientists await new worlds as CERN collider is refitted

Scientists home in on mysterious dark matter

Strong signs Higgs boson has been found: CERN

CERN scientists say particle is no "super-Higgs"

Higgs Boson update: it's cool, it exists, it's not necessarily so 'exotic'

Atom smasher heading for two-year hiatus

Higgs boson announcement awaited

World's largest atom smasher now faster

Hawking, CERN scientists win big physics prizes

Hawking and CERN scoop world's richest science prize

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  Physicist says ‘new particle observed’

CMS spokesperson Joe Incandela reports in a CERN video that a new particle has been observed at Europe's Large Hadron Collider.

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Related Photos

The LHC tunnel is pictured during a visit at the CERN in Meyrin, near Geneva
The LHC tunnel is pictured during a visit at the CERN in Meyrin, near Geneva

The LHC tunnel is pictured during a visit at the Organization for Nuclear Research in Meyrin, near Geneva April 10, 2013. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

CERN staff speak in the LHC tunnel during a visit at the CERN in Meyrin, near Geneva
CERN staff speak in the LHC tunnel during a visit at the CERN in Meyrin, near Geneva

CERN staff speak in the LHC tunnel during a visit at the Organization for Nuclear Research in Meyrin, near Geneva April 10, 2013. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

Particle physicist Goulette gestures in front of the ATLAS experiment during a visit at the CERN in Meyrin, near Geneva
Particle physicist Goulette gestures in front of the ATLAS experiment during a visit at the CERN in Meyrin, near Geneva

Particle physicist Marc Goulette gestures in front of the ATLAS experiment during a visit at the Organization for Nuclear Research in Meyrin, near Geneva April 10, 2013. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

A technician stands near equipment of the CMS experience at the CERN in Cessy
A technician stands near equipment of the CMS experience at the CERN in Cessy

A technician stands near equipment of the Compact Muon Solenoid experience at the Organization for Nuclear Research in the French village of Cessy near Geneva in Switzerland April 15, 2013. As hundreds of engineers and workers start two years of work to fit out the giant LHC particle collider to