Scientists at the Large Hadron Collider say they are getting some fascinating early results as they get set to probe new areas of physics.
The giant machine on the Franco-Swiss border is studying the fundamental nature of matter by smashing together proton particles at near light-speed.
Its CMS detector is reported to have seen "new and interesting effects".
These effects concern the particular paths taken by the debris particles as they move away from the impacts.
These angular correlations emerged in the statistical study of particle movements in billions of collisions.
"In some sense, it's like the particles talk to each other and they decide which way to go," explained CMS Spokesperson Guido Tonelli.
"There should be a dynamic mechanism there somehow giving them a preferred direction, which is not down to the trivial explanation of momentum and energy conservation. It is something which is so far not fully understood," he told BBC News.
Mr Tonelli said the effects were small and had prompted much debate; although he said they probably did not indicate any new physics.
"We claim only that we have seen something unusual and we want the scientific community to criticise us, to understand if we did things correctly or if we did something wrong," he added.
The results are said to be interesting because they mirror similar observations at the US Brookhaven National Laboratory, which has been employing a lower energy machine but using more massive atomic nuclei as the impactors.
Such investigations are part of the quest to understand the hot dense state in which matter is thought to have existed just fractions of a second after the Big Bang.
Researchers want to see evidence of this state, known as a quark-gluon plasma, so they can explain how it transitioned into the ordinary nuclear material that makes up the Universe today.
The LHC will begin to probe this domain itself in November when it starts colliding the nuclei of lead atoms. ...
via BBC News - LHC finds 'interesting effects'.
The back up Blog of the real Xenophilius Lovegood, a slightly mad scientist.
Thursday, September 23, 2010
LHC finds 'interesting effects'
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