For more than twenty years now, the Tevatron at Fermilab, the world's most powerful particle accelerator, has opened a doorway to exploring the deepest mysteries of the universe. In 2007, an even more powerful accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider will begin operation at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. An international consortium of particle physicists has made a proposal for the next step : the International Linear Collider (ILC). Stretching approximately 35-kilometers in length ,this electron-positron collider will allow researchers to discover the Terascale, an energy region that may answer some of the most fundamental questions of all time.
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Director's Corner: The art of decision making: STF phase-2 cavity choice
-From ILC Newsline
1 May 2008

SCRF meeting establishes compatibility framework
-From Fermilab Today
28 April 2008

Fermilab reaches milestone with successful cavity test
-From Fermilab Today
17 April 2008

Collaboration between India and Japan for SCRF technology
-From ILC Newsline
10 April 2008

Linear Collider News Archive

First AES single-cell 1.3GHz cavity Tested

Argonne EP'd Single Cell Cavity Tested

AES2 Result

New Muon Lab

Cavity Processing

Vertical Test Stand

Horizontal Test Stand

Cryomodule Assembly Buildings

Recent Talks and Posters

ILC Citizens' Task Force

Early, open communication highlighted for ILC sites
-Fermilab Today
29 October, 2007

ILC Citizens' Task Force tours underground tunnels
-Fermilab Today
19 September 2007

Tunnel vision
-Kane County Chronicle
16 September 2007

'What's it going to do to my house'
-From Beacon News
28 July, 2007