Abstract
Hard on the heels of the Lepton-Photon Symposium at Stanford in August came the International Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics in Madrid from 6-13 September. With the two meetings held so close together, there was much overlap in the physics reported, although some teams were able to use the extra month to present new results. A notable example was the Mark II team working at Stanford's SLC linear collider, who presented new limits on the number of allowed neutrinos.The Madrid meeting attracted about 600 participants from all over the world. An initial three days of parallel sessions followed by four days of plenary talks could cover the field in depth and in breadth.
Citation Formats
Anon.
Madrid Physics Conference.
CERN: N. p.,
1989.
Web.
Anon.
Madrid Physics Conference.
CERN.
Anon.
1989.
"Madrid Physics Conference."
CERN.
@misc{etde_22357669,
title = {Madrid Physics Conference}
author = {Anon.}
abstractNote = {Hard on the heels of the Lepton-Photon Symposium at Stanford in August came the International Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics in Madrid from 6-13 September. With the two meetings held so close together, there was much overlap in the physics reported, although some teams were able to use the extra month to present new results. A notable example was the Mark II team working at Stanford's SLC linear collider, who presented new limits on the number of allowed neutrinos.The Madrid meeting attracted about 600 participants from all over the world. An initial three days of parallel sessions followed by four days of plenary talks could cover the field in depth and in breadth.}
journal = []
issue = {9}
volume = {29}
journal type = {AC}
place = {CERN}
year = {1989}
month = {Nov}
}
title = {Madrid Physics Conference}
author = {Anon.}
abstractNote = {Hard on the heels of the Lepton-Photon Symposium at Stanford in August came the International Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics in Madrid from 6-13 September. With the two meetings held so close together, there was much overlap in the physics reported, although some teams were able to use the extra month to present new results. A notable example was the Mark II team working at Stanford's SLC linear collider, who presented new limits on the number of allowed neutrinos.The Madrid meeting attracted about 600 participants from all over the world. An initial three days of parallel sessions followed by four days of plenary talks could cover the field in depth and in breadth.}
journal = []
issue = {9}
volume = {29}
journal type = {AC}
place = {CERN}
year = {1989}
month = {Nov}
}