Xenophilia (True Strange Stuff)

The back up Blog of the real Xenophilius Lovegood, a slightly mad scientist.

Pages

  • Home
  • Xeno's UFO Timeline
  • About
  • Tools for Musicians
  • Free Software
  • Xeno's UFO Timeline

Saturday, April 3, 2010

A Primer on the Large Hadron Collider and Particle Physics

The New York Times' DENNIS OVERBYE has this interesting primer on particle physics.
For those whose physics knowledge was a bit rusty, the news about the Large Hadron Collider, the world's biggest physics machine, might have been puzzling. ... Yes, the collider finally crashed subatomic particles into one another last week, but why, exactly, is that important? Here is a primer on the collider - with just enough information, hopefully, to impress guests at your next cocktail party ...






Let’s be basic. What does a particle physicist do?

Particle physicists have one trick that they do over and over again, which is to smash things together and watch what comes tumbling out.

What does it mean to say that the collider will allow physicists to go back to the Big Bang? Is the collider a time machine?

Physicists suspect that the laws of physics evolved as the universe cooled from billions or trillions of degrees in the first moments of the Big Bang to superfrigid temperatures today (3 degrees Kelvin) — the way water changes from steam to liquid to ice as temperatures decline. As the Earth cooled, physicists suspect, everything became more complicated. Particles and forces once indistinguishable developed their own identities, the way Spanish, French and Italian diverged from the original Latin.

By crashing together subatomic particles — protons — physicists create little fireballs that revisit the conditions of these earlier times and see what might have gone on back then, sort of like the scientists in Jurassic Park reincarnating dinosaurs.

The collider, which is outside Geneva, is 17 miles around. Why is it so big?

Einstein taught us that energy and mass are equivalent. So, the more energy packed into a fireball, the more massive it becomes. The collider has to be big and powerful enough to pack tremendous amounts of energy into a proton.

Moreover, the faster the particles travel, the harder it is to bend their paths in a circle, so that they come back around and bang into each other. The collider is designed so that protons travel down the centers of powerful electromagnets that are the size of redwood trunks, which bend the particles’ paths into circles, creating a collision. Although the electromagnets are among the strongest ever built, they still can’t achieve a turning radius for the protons of less than 2.7 miles.

All in all, the bigger the accelerator, the bigger the crash, and the better chance of seeing what is on nature’s menu.

What are physicists hoping to see?

According to some theories, a whole list of items that haven’t been seen yet — with names like gluinos, photinos, squarks and winos — because we haven’t had enough energy to create a big enough collision.

Any one of these particles, if they exist, could constitute the clouds of dark matter, which, astronomers tell us, produce the gravity that holds galaxies and other cosmic structures together.

Another missing link of physics is a particle known as the Higgs boson, after Peter Higgs of the University of Edinburgh, which imbues other particles with mass by creating a cosmic molasses that sticks to them and bulks them up as they travel along, not unlike the way an entourage forms around a rock star when they walk into a club.

Have scientists ever seen dark matter?

It’s invisible, but astronomers have deduced from their measurements of galactic motions that the visible elements of the cosmos, like galaxies, are embedded in huge clouds of it.

Will physicists see these gluinos, photinos, squarks and winos?

There is no guarantee that any will be discovered, which is what makes science fun, as well as nerve-racking.

So how much energy do you need to create these fireballs?

At the Large Hadron Collider, that energy is now 3.5 trillion electron volts per proton — about as much energy as a flea requires to do a pushup. That may not sound like much, but for a tiny proton, it is a lot of energy. It is the equivalent of a 200-pound man bulking up by 700,000 pounds.

What’s an electron volt?

An electron volt is the amount of energy an electron would gain passing from the negative to the positive side of a one-volt battery. It is the basic unit of energy and of mass preferred by physicists.

When protons collide, is there a big bang?

There is no sound. It’s not like a bomb exploding.

In previous trials, there was an actual explosion.

All that current is dangerous. During the testing of the collider in September 2008, the electrical connection between a pair of the giant magnets vaporized. There are thousands of such connections in the collider, many of which are now believed to be defective. As a result the collider can only run at half-power for the next two years.

Could the collider make a black hole and destroy the Earth?

The collider is not going to do anything that high-energy cosmic rays have not done repeatedly on Earth and elsewhere in the universe. There is no evidence that such collisions have created black holes or that, if they have, the black holes have caused any damage. According to even the most speculative string theory variations on black holes, the Large Hadron Collider is not strong enough to produce a black hole.

Too bad, because many physicists would dearly like to see one.

via A Primer on the Large Hadron Collider and Particle Physics - NYTimes.com.
Posted by Xeno
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Physics

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Xeno Blog Mirror!

  • Xenophilius (Mirror #1)
  • Xenophilius (Mirror #2)
  • Xenophilius (old #3)
  • Xenophilius (old #4)
  • Xenophilius (old #5)
  • Xenophilius (old #6)
  • About
  • www.xenophilia.com

Blog Archive

  • ►  2011 (904)
    • ►  April (229)
    • ►  March (278)
    • ►  February (232)
    • ►  January (165)
  • ▼  2010 (3056)
    • ►  December (70)
    • ►  November (451)
    • ►  October (448)
    • ►  September (260)
    • ►  August (242)
    • ►  July (160)
    • ►  June (210)
    • ►  May (224)
    • ▼  April (273)
      • Indian Man, Prahlad Jani, Lives Seven Decades With...
      • Amazing Underwater River in Mexico?
      • Calculus created in India 250 years before Newton:...
      • If data is ambigous, the inflexible people sway pu...
      • Cryptozoology Online: Daily News: At last, it's mo...
      • Elephant helps give broken safari jeep push start
      • Shops agree to £20m pay-out over 'toxic sofas'
      • Widow builds children a life-size cardboard cut-ou...
      • Driver reverses car through wall of car park's sev...
      • Giant Blizzard Raging on Saturn
      • Conspiracy of Science - Earth is in fact growing
      • Site with video claims secret night time removal o...
      • Have We Contaminated Mars with Life?
      • Noah's Ark Found? Uh, No.
      • Are US oil rigs under attack by terrorists?
      • Oil Spill Reaches the US
      • Government's new modus operandi for innovation: Th...
      • Teenager died after having his lip pierced
      • Third of U.S. teens with phones text 100 times a day
      • Largest atlas of nuclear galactic rings unveiled
      • Nude-Colored Hospital Gowns Could Help Doctors Bet...
      • Less is more when restraining calories boosts immu...
      • Single monster tornado blamed for 10 Miss. deaths
      • US Supreme Court rules against Monsanto GM alfalfa...
      • Giant NASA balloon crashes in Australia
      • Purple Pokeberries hold secret to affordable solar...
      • The secrets of intelligence lie within a single cell
      • Brain shuts off in response to healer's prayer
      • Martian tubes could be home for 'cavenauts'
      • Real Bloody Flying Nazi Soldiers With Jet Packs - ...
      • Rare 95-million-year-old flying reptile Aetodactyl...
      • Nanodots Breakthrough May Lead To ‘A Library On On...
      • Water ice found on Asteroid gives clues to oceans'...
      • New microscopy technique reveals mechanics of bloo...
      • Developing world will produce double the e-waste o...
      • UniversitätsKlinikum Heidelberg: How Nerve Cells D...
      • Suntanned women to be arrested under Islamic dress...
      • Israel jails man for 'holy semen' sex abuse
      • Man jailed after home break in strangeness
      • Aspiring sailor trying to sail round the UK circle...
      • The smallest horse in the world?
      • Man steals electricity with meat hook
      • Monitor Lizard Discovered with Flame-Colored Head
      • Baby son outgrowing smallest mother
      • 'Noah's Ark' found in Turkey... oh, Nevermind. It'...
      • An underlying cause for psychopathic behavior?
      • Gene silencing prevents its first human disease
      • Revealed: The secret of how worms re-grow amputate...
      • Scientists learn to block pain at its source
      • Study finds body's response to repetitive laughter...
      • Physicists capture first images of atomic spin
      • US Republicans block debate of finance rules reform
      • Robot vessels used to cap Gulf of Mexico oil leak
      • Panama's Noriega is extradited from US to France
      • George W Bush book to tell of 'flaws and mistakes'
      • How colourful fish could explain why life on Earth...
      • Scientists make cancer cells vanish
      • Dinosaurs killed off by sudden drop in temperature
      • Deadly strain of airborne fungus spreading among h...
      • WHOI scientists find ancient asphalt domes off Cal...
      • Brain-like computing on an organic molecular layer
      • Mass rally in Japan against US base on Okinawa
      • X-37B military spaceplane launches from Cape Canav...
      • Question: Would an entire world of your clones hav...
      • Italian woman with evidence she was impregnated by...
      • Woman goes on blow gun spree in Stevens Point
      • Mysterious Desert Lines Were Animal Traps
      • Do pressures to publish increase scientists' bias?
      • Vanished: 'Chupacabra' walks away from Fiesta booth
      • NASA may send Orion capsule to International Space...
      • Sounds Make Memories Stick During Sleep
      • Ecological risk grows as Deepwater Horizon oil rig...
      • Bees see world 5 times faster than humans
      • Archaeologists unearth 6th century Ikea-style temple
      • New evidence that green tea may help fight glaucom...
      • Fish oil supplements provide no benefit to brain p...
      • High Fructose Corn Syrup Linked to Liver Scarring
      • Alzheimer's drugs cause brain damage and actually ...
      • Refreshing News: U.S. Realeases New $100 Bill (Pics)
      • Chinese scientists clone cashmere goat
      • 8 Invented Diseases Big Pharma Is Banking on
      • Making the invisible visible
      • Song in progress, Uranium Train. Animator sought.
      • Ash cloud's silver lining: bluer skies
      • Clever New Caledonian crows can use three tools
      • Heaven: A fool's paradise
      • Brain training does not cause general improvement ...
      • Turkmen president wants to close entrance to Hell.
      • Rampaging goat puts three in hospital
      • 'Gigantic scorpion' fossil found in Fife
      • My Short Sale: Everything Worked Out Fine
      • US Military Testing High-Tech Dirigibles in Utah
      • Researchers create artificial human skin
      • The Great American Bubble Machine
      • Eyjafjallajokull could help cool us, but not much,...
      • New Bony-Skulled Dinosaur Species Discovered in Texas
      • Sherpas set out to clear Everest of garbage – and ...
      • Five-year-old girl hits hole-in-oneGolf
      • An Artificial Eye on Your Driving
      • Do you carry a rare DNA sequence missing from the ...
    • ►  March (234)
    • ►  February (206)
    • ►  January (278)
  • ►  2009 (2889)
    • ►  December (215)
    • ►  November (368)
    • ►  October (381)
    • ►  September (307)
    • ►  August (218)
    • ►  June (240)
    • ►  May (279)
    • ►  April (280)
    • ►  March (283)
    • ►  January (318)
  • ►  2008 (2275)
    • ►  December (192)
    • ►  November (190)
    • ►  October (239)
    • ►  September (204)
    • ►  August (173)
    • ►  July (220)
    • ►  June (243)
    • ►  May (263)
    • ►  April (186)
    • ►  March (233)
    • ►  February (132)
  • ►  2006 (1386)
    • ►  December (97)
    • ►  November (179)
    • ►  October (105)
    • ►  September (36)
    • ►  August (96)
    • ►  July (112)
    • ►  June (198)
    • ►  May (232)
    • ►  April (126)
    • ►  March (200)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (4)
  • ►  2005 (82)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  October (5)
    • ►  September (10)
    • ►  August (16)
    • ►  July (8)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (10)
    • ►  April (2)
    • ►  March (12)
    • ►  February (6)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2004 (18)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (3)
    • ►  October (2)
    • ►  September (2)
    • ►  August (2)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  February (2)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2003 (5)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (2)
  • ►  2002 (4)
    • ►  October (4)

Total Pageviews


Awesome Inc. theme. Powered by Blogger.