FAIR News

The FAIR news are kindly hosted by GSI.

A person is positioned on a patient bench, held by a robot, in front of a cylindrical beam exit window.
The Technical University of Applied Sciences Mittelhessen (THM) and GSI/FAIR in Darmstadt intend to collaborate more closely in the field of particle therapy. A corresponding collaboration agreement was recently signed by both partners. The goal is to improve particle therapy both for the Marburg Ion Beam Therapy Center (MIT) and centers worldwide, as well as to support translational and basic research like it is conducted at the GSI/FAIR accelerator facilities.



Antimatter on the road - for the first time antiprotons were transported in by a truck.
On 24 March 2026, in a world first, a team of scientists from the BASE experiment at CERN, including GSI researchers, successfully transported a trap filled with antiprotons in a truck across the Laboratory’s main site. The team managed to accumulate a cloud of antiprotons in an innovative portable cryogenic Penning trap, then disconnect it from the experimental facility, load it onto a truck and continue experiment operation after transport. This is a remarkable achievement, given that…



A group of persons stands in a large room. At the right-hand corner a huge experiment setup is visible.
During the ALICE Masterclass on the GSI/FAIR campus, again this year 19 high-school students had the opportunity to analyze data from the ALICE experiment at the CERN research center. GSI/FAIR significantly contributes to the construction, operation and data analysis of ALICE. Scientists of GSI/FAIR’s ALICE research department organized the event.



An astronaut in a white space suit hovers next to a cylindrical capsule.
Cosmic rays are one of the greatest challenges for space travel and pose a considerable risk to humans and materials. For the first time on European soil, an international research team in collaboration with the European Space Agency (ESA) has succeeded in providing a simulator for Galactic Cosmic Rays at the GSI/FAIR accelerator facility in Darmstadt, Germany. The results have been published in two articles in the journal “Life Sciences in Space Research.”



Helmholtz President Martin Keller (left) toured the FAIR ring accelerator and many other stops across the FAIR site and GSI campus.
On 10 March 2026, Professor Martin Keller, President of the Helmholtz Association, visited GSI and FAIR in Darmstadt on the occasion of taking office. The purpose of the visit was to gain in-depth insight into the structures and research activities at the site, and to engage directly with the people driving them – especially staff members and early-career researchers. The guest of honour at the event was Hessian Minister of Science and Research, Art and Culture, Timon Gremmels.



A woman stands before a large, green magnet.
Physicist Kathrin Wimmer from GSI/FAIR has taken up a W3 professorship in Experimental Nuclear Physics/Nuclear Structure at the University of Cologne. The appointment underscores her outstanding scientific expertise and is also a sign of the excellent support for young scientists at GSI/FAIR.



Four men and two women stand in front of a stage.
The annual meeting of the FAIR-GSI Exotic Nuclei Community (GENCO) was held again this year at GSI/FAIR as part of the NUSTAR Annual Meeting. In a festive colloquium, the Young Scientist Award was presented to Dr. Michail Athanasakis-Kaklamanakis from the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA), University of Colorado, and three scientists received the FAIR-GENCO Membership Award. The keynote address was given by Professor Alexandra Gade from Michigan State University (MSU) and the…



Visit to the FAIR construction site (f.l. Dr. Inti Lehmann, Dr. Katharina Stummeyer, Svenja Schulze, Georg Händel, Jörg Blaurock)
Member of the German Bundestag Svenja Schulze (SPD), former Federal Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development, visited GSI and FAIR in Darmstadt together with Bijan Kaffenberger (SPD), member of the Hessian State Parliament. The main focus of the visit was on the latest developments in research and infrastructure at GSI and FAIR as well as on the measures taken in the aftermath of the recent fire incident.



Two men stand in front of a green and a yellow magnet of the GSI Fragement Separator
Chemical elements, new isotopes, tiny particles — the GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt, Germany, is renowned for its discoveries, including a total of six superheavy elements. Now there is a new world record to report: The research center, where the international accelerator facility FAIR is currently being built, leads the world rankings in the discovery of nuclear isomers. The statistics were compiled by Professor Michael Thoennessen from Michigan State University,…




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