Research Spotlight

ALICE: Quark-Gluon Plasma

To solve mysteries surrounding quarks and gluons, the ALICE experiment tries to put quarks and gluons into a new state of aggregation at extremely high temperatures. This is the quark-gluon plasma. The researchers study this plasma before the quarks cool down and regroup into ‘normal’ matter.

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Outreach website

Nikhef's Outreach activities

Want to find out more about our research? On our Outreach website you will find all our outreach activities organised by Nikhef in Amsterdam for the general public, students and teachers. See you at Nikhef!

Go to the Outreach site
Research

Particle Physics

In particle physics, very large detectors are used to study elementary particles. Particles such as protons are accelerated in a particle accelerator, and made to collide with each other. Nikhef is active in ALICE, ATLAS and LHCb at CERN.

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Research Spotlight

KM3NeT: Neutrinos

Nikhef researchers are researching neutrinos, uncharged subatomic particles that shoot straight through our planet. The researchers do so in a collaborative effort at an international project called KM3NeT.

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Research

Astroparticle physics

Astroparticle physics combines physics and astronomy. In the cosmos, very strong magnetic fields create what can be considered a ‘natural’ particle accelerator. To perform astrophysics research, scientists ‘just’ need to build the right detectors. Nikhef is active in KM3NeT, Auger, XENON1T/nT and Virgo.

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Research Spotlight

eEDM

Researchers at the University of Groningen, part of the Nikhef collaboration, cool and manipulate molecules to study the fundamental interactions and symmetries of the Standard Model of particle physics.

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Technology at Nikhef

Technology departments

The technology departments at Nikhef employ about 80 people. They support the scientific projects by designing and building (parts of) detectors, accelerators, readout and control systems, and computer and network infrastructures.

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National Institute for Subatomic Physics

Welcome to Nikhef. We are the Dutch National Institute for Subatomic Physics. Our institute performs research into the elementary building blocks of our Universe, their mutual forces and the structure of space and time.
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Please note that some of the content on our homepage and further pages has not been translated into English yet.

Recent news

13 November 2024

Nikhef postdoc Enzo Tapia San Martín wins Virgo Award 2024

Young researchers Enzo Tapia San Martín (researcher at gravitational waves group at Nikhef) and Mattia Boldrini (researcher at the Roma section of the Italian National Institute for Nuclear…

11 November 2024

ATLAS hunts for the production of three Higgs bosons

The Higgs field – an invisible quantum field that permeates the entire Universe – gives masses to fundamental particles. The discovery of the Higgs boson confirmed its existence…

6 November 2024

CERN Council selects Mark Thomson as next Director-General

Professor Thomson’s five-year mandate will begin on 1 January 2026. Today, the CERN Council selected British physicist Mark Thomson as the Organization’s next Director-General. The appointment will be…

Future events

17 September / 12 December 2024

Profielwerkstukken on 29 November and 12 December

You are in 6 vwo, you are very curious about subatomic particles and you have to start working on your profielwerkstuk soon. Then Nikhef is the place to…
19 November 2024

PhD defense Andrei Utina @ UM

Andrei Utina, PhD at Nikhef, will defend his thesis Tuesday 19 November 2024 at 13.00 at the Maastricht University. Instrumentation and characterization techniques for advanced gravitational-wave observatories (pdf)…