Alex Mercer Posted June 2, 2021 Posted June 2, 2021 Wikipedia says the results were published on April 7th but I can't find it online with a google search. Which leads me to question, where do most scientists (mostly physicists) publish their experimental data and theories?
Sensei Posted June 2, 2021 Posted June 2, 2021 22 minutes ago, Alex Mercer said: Wikipedia says the results were published on April 7th but I can't find it online with a google search. Which leads me to question, where do most scientists (mostly physicists) publish their experimental data and theories? If the experiment was performed in the Fermilab, I would expect results being published on the Fermilab website. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muon_g-2 The reference was given in the Wikipedia article: https://news.fnal.gov/2021/04/first-results-from-fermilabs-muon-g-2-experiment-strengthen-evidence-of-new-physics/
swansont Posted June 2, 2021 Posted June 2, 2021 1 hour ago, Alex Mercer said: Wikipedia says the results were published on April 7th but I can't find it online with a google search. Which leads me to question, where do most scientists (mostly physicists) publish their experimental data and theories? Raw data are usually not published. What is presented is data after analysis. Theories are often published separately; much of the theory may have been developed by others.
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