FAIR News

The FAIR news are kindly hosted by GSI.

Handover of the HippoBox hardware to the stem cell differentiation and cytogenetics group by the company YURI.
A piece of GSI/FAIR's cutting-edge research is scheduled to be launched into space next year: the Biophysics department will be involved in one of the next scientific missions on the International Space Station (ISS) with a highly innovative research project. The “HippoBox” project was successfully reviewed by the German Space Agency at DLR and recently selected for participation in the CELLBOX-4 mission on the ISS. The aim of the project is to use brain organoids (“mini-brains”) to…



Artificial depiction of the FAIR accelerator SIS100
GSI/FAIR will continue its popular public lecture series “Wissenschaft für Alle” in a hybrid format in the second term of 2025. Interested parties can either attend the event in the lecture hall of GSI/FAIR following a registration or dial into the broadcast of the event via video conference using an internet-enabled device such as a laptop, cell phone or tablet. The program begins on Wednesday, August 20, 2025, with a lecture by Dr. Christina Will on the use of computer-aided design in the ...



Dr. Barbara Maria Latacz, scientist at CERN and lead author of the study adjusting the trap electronics.
The BASE collaboration at the European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN in Geneva has achieved a breakthrough in antimatter research: For the first time, the researchers were able to let a single antiproton – the antimatter counterpart of a proton – oscillate between two spin quantum states in a controlled manner for almost a minute. The collaboration includes scientists from numerous international institutions, including researchers from Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) and…



Visit of the frigate Hessen at GSI/FAIR
As part of a summer tour of the state of Hesse, organized by the Hessian State Chancellery, the crew of the frigate Hessen visited the FAIR and GSI campus. The group was welcomed by Jörg Blaurock, Technical Managing Director of FAIR and GSI. The participants then attended an introductory lecture providing an overview of the accelerator facilities and experiments, the research results achieved to date, and the construction of the international research center FAIR.



SCIENCE POP-UP in the Darmstadt city center.
Many visitors took the opportunity during this year’s Heinerfest to explore the den SCIENCE POP-UP by GSI and FAIR in Darmstadt’s city center. Especially on Saturday, July 5, the interactive exhibition was bustling with activity.



The FAIR Council, the highest decision-making body of the international accelerator project FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research), met for its regular meeting in Darmstadt on July 8 and 9.
With great commitment from all parties involved, the FAIR Council, the highest decision-making body of the international accelerator project FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research), met for its regular meeting in Darmstadt on July 8 and 9, 2025. Almost all of the representatives of the international FAIR shareholders met on site to agree on the further key decisions for the commissioning of the unique research facility.



Multiple-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer (MR-TOF-MS) at TRIUMF, Canada
An international team of researchers, led by scientists of GSI/FAIR in Darmstadt, Germany, has studied r-process nucleosynthesis in measurements conducted at the Canadian research center TRIUMF in Vancouver. At the center of this work are the first mass measurements of three extremely neutron-rich tin isotopes: tin-136, tin-137 and tin-138. The results are published in the journal Physical Review Letters.



Prof. Dr. Ralph Aßmann
Dr. Ralph Aßmann has been appointed as cooperative professor in the Department of Physics at Goethe University. The internationally renowned expert in the field of accelerator physics heads the business area “Accelerator Operation and Development (ACC)” at GSI/FAIR. In this function, Aßmann is responsible for the operation of the existing accelerator facilities and for the integration and commissioning of the international particle accelerator facility FAIR, which is currently under…



Heavy-ion synchrotron SIS18 - exterior view.
For the first time, team members of the SIS18/SIS100 sub-project have succeeded in accelerating and extracting two different ion beams with different revolution frequencies together in the same cycle at the SIS18 heavy ion synchrotron. The faster ions of one beam constantly overtake the slower ions of the other beam, so that the particle bunches of the two beams repeatedly penetrate each other. This globally unique procedure impressively underlines the enormous innovation potential and ...




Loading...