Skip to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
Sign out
Sign in
to online tools
UVic
Search
UVic home
COVID-19
Admissions
Academics
Research
Library
Students
Faculty & staff
Online tools
Return to
global menu
.
Skip to
primary navigation
.
Skip to
secondary navigation
.
Skip to
page content
.
University
of Victoria
UVic News
Search
Search
Search
Search
Search UVic News
Search UVic
Search for people
Search for departments
Search for experts
Search for news
Search for resources
Navigation
Home
Topics
Academic areas
Research
Student life
Media
Publications
Search
home
topics
ATLAS
What to do with exabytes of data
The Ring
Randall Sobie is leading a project to build a cloud computing system for the ATLAS experiment at CERN—providing storage and analysis tools for the billion gigabytes of data produced at the Large Hadron Collider. The new system will significantly advance global investigations into the fundamental structure of the universe.
Project expands ATLAS cloud computing
Media release
UVic physicist Randall Sobie is leading a project to build a data and cloud computing system for the ATLAS experiment at the CERN Laboratory in Geneva Switzerland. The new system will significantly advance global investigations into the fundamental structure of the universe.
ATLAS post for McPherson
The Ring
Rob McPherson (physics and astronomy) has been named deputy spokesperson of the ATLAS experiment, a 3,000-strong international scientific collaboration that built and manages one of two particle detectors at the CERN Large Hadron Collider on the French-Swiss border. The new position effectively makes McPherson the vice-president of ATLAS, working with the spokesperson to oversee detector and computing operations and manage relationships with funding agencies. The UVic ATLAS team designed and built several crucial components of the detector, which made scientific history by discovering the elusive Higgs boson particle in 2012.
Indigenous place names
The Ring
Long before settler culture attached the names of explorers, businessmen and political leaders to the mountains, rivers and landscape we now call Vancouver Island, the traditional names used by First Nations carried a wealth of information about those places—information that anthropology student Amy Becker has been working to preserve. Becker, recipient of a 2013-14 Jamie Cassels Undergrad Research Award (JCURA), explains “Indigenous place names are embedded in the culture, landscape, language and identities of the people who use them.”
< Newer
1
Older >
Navigation
Content
Quick links
Return to
global menu
.
Return to
primary navigation
.
Return to
secondary navigation
.
Return to
page content
.