The UK was a founder member of CERN in 1954 and continues to have a major involvement, taking part in scientific breakthroughs, developing industrial collaboration to exploit new technologies and helping to shape the future of particle physics research.
Professor Ian Halliday, CEO of the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council, which funds the UK subscription to CERN, said "Through CERN, the UK is engaged in the ultimate quest to find the answers to the biggest questions in the Universe - how was it formed? What is it made of? Why does it look the way it does today? Why do matter and energy interact the way they do?"
Speaking at the event to mark the anniversary, Lord Sainsbury, Minister for Science and Innovation, said: "The UK was one of the first to contribute to CERN and fifty years on we are still reaping the benefits of this world-leading facility for UK science and engineering.
"World-class scientific research underpins our economic prosperity and creates technologies that benefit us all, with major advancements in practically all fields of life from medical treatment to understanding the origins of the planet. "
At the same event, CERN DG Robert Aymar said, "Over the years, Britain's science, industry and culture have been enriched by membership of CERN, and I am sure that we can look forward to many more years of fruitful collaboration in the pursuit of knowledge."
UK highlights at CERN
CERN's future promises more developments in science and technology. In 2007, CERN's newest facility, the Large Hadron Collider will commence operations, searching for the elusive Higgs Boson - the particle thought to give others mass, and answering compelling questions about dark matter and dark energy, the existence of extra dimensions and the fundamental nature of matter, energy, space and time.