Some of the world's largest collaborative virtual teams work at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, straddling the French-Swiss border. The research groups, involving thousands of scientists and students from dozens of countries, use a massive particle accelerator to look for the components of dark matter.
Two years ago, talk about success with the kind of collaboration that typifies such teams was "hype," says Dr. Helge Meinhard, who leads the CERN information technology (IT) staff that supports, among others, an overall team comprised of more than 2,000 physicists, including 500 students, from 150 institutions in 30 countries. This collaboration, known as the Atlas Experiment, is itself a collection of virtual teams. Atlas is closely linked with other similarly large collaborations, and communication and knowledge-sharing between them are intense.