CERN Science Gateway: highlights from the first opening weeks
See photo highlights from the inauguration and the first visitors to CERN’s brand new centre for education and outreach
| By Naomi Dinmore
On Saturday, 7 October, CERN inaugurated its brand new centre for education and outreach, CERN Science Gateway. From Sunday, 8 October onwards, CERN Science Gateway welcomed its first visitors, who explored the exhibitions and state-of-the-art lab facilities, enjoyed science shows and the sunshine on the piazza and took a break in the Big Bang Café.
“It’s nice to see concepts we’re familiar with being applied to particle physics, a field we don’t know,” said two computer science students from Canada, who visited Science Gateway as part of their tour of Switzerland.
“I really like all the games I can try out!” said a seven-year-old from Switzerland, visiting with his family. His father added, “The exhibitions are really well-made and definitely worth visiting.”
“I don’t really know anything about physics – I’m a pre-law student,” said a student from Canada, visiting Science Gateway with her mother. “But we’d heard about CERN and wanted to check it out while we were in Geneva. It’s really interesting to learn about it and I like how interactive it is.”
Scroll through the photos below to see some of the highlights from the opening week.
The ribbon-cutting ceremony on Saturday, 7 October, officially declaring CERN Science Gateway open. From left to right: Eliezer Rabinovici, President of the CERN Council, Alain Berset, President of the Swiss Confederation, Fabiola Gianotti, CERN Director-General, John Elkann, Chair of Stellantis, and Renzo Piano, architect of CERN Science Gateway. (Image: CERN)
Throughout Saturday, 7 October, high-school students from the CERN-Solvay camp and children of the CERN community enthusiastically all guests, explaining the science in the exhibitions and demonstrating the new lab facilities. At the end of the day, they were invited up on stage and thanked for their hard work. (Image: CERN)
Children from the CERN community demonstrate that when particles are accelerated in the LHC, the magnetic impulses must be sent at a very precise moment, in this hands-on experiment in the “Discover CERN: Accelerate” exhibition. (Image: CERN)
The “Our Universe: Back to the Big Bang” exhibition features a timeline where visitors can journey back to the beginning of the Universe, as well as games where visitors can create stars and antimatter. (Image: CERN)