First Collisions At the LHC 256
An anonymous reader writes "At 1:06 p.m. Central European Summer Time (CEST) today, the first protons collided at 7 TeV in the Large Hadron Collider. These first collisions, recorded by the LHC experiments, mark the start of the LHC's research program."
First events (Score:5, Informative)
One of the first events seen in Atlas:
http://imgur.com/ugwnl.png [imgur.com]
and in CMS:
http://cmsdoc.cern.ch/events/snapshotA.png [cmsdoc.cern.ch]
Re:First events (Score:5, Informative)
Here are the Atlas official plots:
http://atlas.web.cern.ch/Atlas/public/EVTDISPLAY/events.html [web.cern.ch]
CMS:
http://cms.web.cern.ch/cms/Media/Images/EventDisplays/7_0TeVCollisions/index.html [web.cern.ch]
LHCb:
http://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/1255400 [cdsweb.cern.ch]
Alice:
http://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/1255398?ln=en [cdsweb.cern.ch]
and finally all the CERN public photos:
http://cdsweb.cern.ch/collection/LHC%20First%20Physics%20Photos [cdsweb.cern.ch]
This may be the biggest experiment of all (Score:5, Insightful)
in the history of mankind. this may be the real deal. its possible that we may find the first 'entity' as described as the base of existence in Dewey B Larson's physics approach.
Re:This may be the biggest experiment of all (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:This may be the biggest experiment of all (Score:5, Informative)
It's turtles all the way down.
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(mutters)Goddamn kids woke me up for fucking muons.
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From the CERN news release: "With the amount of data expected, called one inverse femtobarn by physicists, the combined analysis of ATLAS and CMS will be able to explore a wide mass range, and there's even a chance of discovery if the Higgs has a mass near 160 GeV. If it's much lighter or very heavy, it will be harder to find in this first LHC run."
And (apologies to the late Andy Kaufman as Latka Gravis on Taxi), assuming the LHC's magnets don't get too wet. Or too dry.
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Considering we only get interesting collisions every 10^(some number) collisions. So they picked the first ones (because they are historic, not because of scientific interest) to publish since they haven't had time to pore over the billions (trillions?) of collisions to find one of interest to particle physicists.
And really, to the average lay person, a muon makes just as interesting and pretty of a picture as a Higgs Boson.
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On the other hand, if someone ever does discover the God particle, I hope they ask it what the true physics religion is.
Re:This may be the biggest experiment of all (Score:4, Insightful)
IIRC, there are still something like six particles, which the math says MUST exist, but have never been observed. At this point those particles are as theoretical as the "god particle". Simply put, even if I don't correctly recall the number of still theoretical particles, there is still lots and lots of theoretical research yet to be done. Likely, at least many life times worth.
Re:This may be the biggest experiment of all (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder if they will go the Dark Matter/Energy way, and simply call the universe wrong. ^^
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But how many of our theorized particles are actually detectable? It's all well and good to say that gravitons exist, but I don't think we're going to be building a detector the size of Jupiter and waiting around for a few thousands years to prove the idea are we? At some point we'll run out of detectable particles to detect.
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Also don't forget that some other maths says that just about every quantum particle shouldn't exist-- or at least that the maths used to describe them is not consistent. One of the LHCs goals is ultimately to move beyond the Standard model on which it is based.
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You forgot to add "if the Standard Model is a true and accurate description of reality".
One possibility that seems to be frequently overlooked is that we'll discover something totally unexpected, as opposed to just a confirmation that we already know everything....
Zima Blue and Other Stories (Score:2)
A great read- highly recommended.
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Understanding the particles is only the first step. Next would be to bend them to one's will. So while theoretical scientists might be out of a job, it'll be a boom time for mad scientists (no pun intended).
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Then you need to find the Anti-God Particle. Which you can use them to create explosions that will destroy time, I will stop 9/11 by destroying time between 2000 and 2008
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Hey! I had some good times between 2000 and 2008 so could you please only destroy time in New York during that period?
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in the history of mankind. this may be the real deal. its possible that we may find the first 'entity' as described as the base of existence in Dewey B Larson's physics approach.
+4, Insightful?
If we find the Higgs (or not), there are zero implications for the existence of a higher power. We call it the "God particle" primarily because it's proven damned near impossible to prove or disprove the existence of.
There are plenty of phenomena observed in quantum mechanics that exhibit "otherworldly" behavior. The Higgs is not one of them -- our interest in it is almost purely mathematical -- if we find it, it will simply help to confirm a set of assumptions we've been using about partic
dont get worked up needlessly (Score:2)
contrary to what you have misconceived, my post you have replied to has no relevance with god, religion or higher power whatsoever.
it basically points out that this experiment may award us with the knowledge of what 'existing' is. all the 'otherwordly behavior' pale in importance when compared to knowledge of the concept of 'existing'. note i didnt say 'existence', i am talking about the mechanics of existing, or not existing.
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Or not ... as the case may be. Computer Science has convinced me that a theory of everything might not be a practical development even if we knew all the relevant fundamental laws.
Let's say that in principle we learn something that allows us to calculate a formula to unify gravitation and electromagnetism. We don't know whether that formula is decidable, whether its membership in the set of correct formulae can be computed. Even if it is decidable, it might belong to a complexity class like EXPTIME-COMPL
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What's this talk about "correctness?" No formula in the history of physics is known to be "correct." There are a bunch of tattered old incorrect theories which were disproved by experiment, and what's left is the best we have to work with. But to think that we could ever prove a theory "correct" displays a fundamental misunderstanding of science.
Surprised (Score:5, Funny)
I'm quite suprised that I can reach Slashdot's server now that Earth is destroyed and gone.
Re:Surprised (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Surprised (Score:5, Funny)
Phew. Solved that whole cat dilemma, then.
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I guess that means that CERN's precautionary destruction of the earth [qntm.org] in 2008 was for naught!
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The only branch of spacetime where you can still reach Slashdot's server is this one where you got really lucky.
Sorry. I find it funny that you're describing a Slashdot reader as getting really lucky.
;)
I know. I know. I'm on the same boat so I shouldn't jest.
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All the other versions of you in all the other branches of spacetime are toast. The only branch of spacetime where you can still reach Slashdot's server is this one where you got really lucky.
Ah. The many-trolls hypothesis.
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Except for the fact we'd all be scrunched down to the size of a golf ball, nothing at all would be different.
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I'd recommend heading straight into the centre through the axis of rotation, though. High energy x-ray death sounds better to me than being pulled apart.
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But if the entire Earth would be swallowed by a black hole at once, would we even notice it?
Yes. Tidal forces [wikipedia.org] would stretch everything like spaghetti and tear it apart.
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I'm quite suprised that I can reach Slashdot's server now that Earth is destroyed and gone.
Welcome to Cachedot.org, impaledsunset. Your new user ID is '6'. May all your sunsets be impaled.
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are you sure it was a black hole and not a strangelet?
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I guess that means LHC was a triumph.
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Well, now, to be fair, the LHC is only up to half power at this point.
Of course, the idea that we'll be swallowed up by a black hole is still utterly absurd. But our current and ongoing existence is, unfortunately, not sufficient evidenced to completely disprove the cranks.
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Don't you know anything about black holes?! When you get sucked in to them your speed increases so much that it takes forever for you to actually get pulled in, so much so, that it ends up being business as usual on earth.. duh
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Resources (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Resources (Score:5, Funny)
The live webcams are also worth checking out:
'Camera 7: looking at the Underground Experimental Cavern from the Saleve side.'
'Camera 8: looking out of the window of the 1st Floor of the SCX building that houses the CMS Control room.'
http://www.cyriak.co.uk/lhc/lhc-webcams.html [cyriak.co.uk]
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Cyriak is coincidentally the name of a British animator. [wikipedia.org]
Excellent news! (Score:5, Insightful)
P.S. The labs down the hall that participate in the collaboration will be partying tonight
Re:Excellent news! (Score:5, Funny)
P.S. The labs down the hall that participate in the collaboration will be partying tonight :)
You can tell because they have undone an extra button on their lab coats, and are drinking full-sugar coke.
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Reminds me of a joke I heard a few years ago:
Q. How do you tell if a programmer is an extrovert?
A. He spends all night staring at your shoes.
Why not "strangelets"? (Score:2)
Any particle physicists care to illuminate us on the reason why the LHC might make mini-blackholes but not "strangelets"? Is it because of the kind of particles used in the collisions? Or are strange flavoured particles currently not in favor these days?
Not that it makes much practical difference; if we were to be scrunched into a black hole (I know, I know it's not going to happen) or converted into strange matter we're just as dead. (In fact won't the conversion to strange matter happen at the speed of
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Now, I am not a physicist, but wasn't it theorized that black holes "fill up" after a little while, and one couldn't really "grow large enough to shred us?"
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They would evaporate according to the theory.
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Just to provide a bit more substance, the idea is that, at the event horizon of the black hole, pairs of virtual particles pop into existence, and sometimes, one of them will fall into the black hole while the other will be radiated away, carrying energy away from the black hole, causing it to lose mass. And the smaller the black hole, the faster this happens, so your average microscopic black hole has an exceedingly short lifetime.
Couple that short lifetime with the fact that, at the scale of these black
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Strangelets are hypothetical, nobody has ever seen, so they might not exist at all. LHC is less likely to produce strangelets than RHIC, but I can't read the paper to see why, but it has something to do with the different nature of the collisions. The energies are too low for production of micro black holes, though.
Coincidence (Score:4, Funny)
We hit 7 TeV, but how much more to go? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:We hit 7 TeV, but how much more to go? (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing is equivalent to the "big bang". The "big bang" is a singularity. 14TeV isn't even equivalent to some of the natural collisions that happen in the upper atmosphere.
Re:We hit 7 TeV, but how much more to go? (Score:5, Informative)
There isn't really a limit. You just get closer and closer to t=0.
The big bang timeline goes roughly (listing the time when the mentioned period _ends_):
10^-43 seconds - Planck epoch - this is where we need string theory etc. The universe is expanding really really really fast. Frigging fast. This is called 'inflation'
10^-36 seconds - Grand unification epoch - this is where gravity starts to become seperate from the other forces
10^-12 seconds - The really-really-really-frigging-fast inflation is now over. We've now just got the normal expansion.
--- WE ARE HERE WITH THE LHC ---
10^-6 seconds - Higgs particles are now able to give particles mass. But too hot for quarks to combine into protons etc.
1 second - Quarks have now formed into protons etc
10 seconds - anti-matter is now annihalted somehow. All the protons etc have been created.
20 minutes - Hydrogen etc is formed. We now have real atoms! (Nucleosynthesis)
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Forgive me if it's a dumb question; Physics major, I aren't.
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Or is that a stupid question?
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Location, and hence words that describe location, like "inside" and "outside", are properties of space. "Outside of space" is not a coherent concept.
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Why not what? Why isn't it a coherent concept? Because, as I said, location is a property of space. That's what space is, by definition. If you point to some location and say "that's outside of space", then you've defined space incorrectly.
You might as well ask whether a rock is an introvert or an extrovert.
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Or, is "space" and arbitrary concept? The "edge of space" is just the most distant object we can observe?
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I agree, it's a mind-bending idea, largely because it sits entirely outside of human experience.
My grounding in cosmology really isn't sufficient to give definite answers to some of your questions. I can say that when they talk about the size and shape of space, they are not talking merely about observable distance; they really mean "this is what the world is shaped like". When faced with the question "what happens at the boundary of space", I strongly suspect most (if not all) count on the fact that we'l
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Definitely introverts. I've sat and talked to rocks all day long, and they hardly ever say a thing back. Talk about shy. Way different than daisies - those things never stop chattering. Total extroverts. (What's that you say, Mr. Day-Glo Green Squirrel? Another tab of acid? Oh, I really couldn't. Well, okay, if you're sure there's enough for everyone.)
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Why not? If it's expanding, it has an edge.
Not necessarily; if it's embedded in a higher-dimensional space, it can expand without having an edge.
For example, the surface of a balloon expands as you inflate it, but it has no edge.
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... Says who? The Universe can be infinite and still expanding. Or it can be finite, curved back on itself, and still expanding.
Let's try two one-dimensional analogues of our three-dimensional space. First, the finite case. Picture a clock face, and a one-dimensional circular Universe on it. The galaxies of this Universe sit at the hour marks. The Universe expands, the circle grows larger, the galaxies find themselves further apart - but there's no edge of the Universe,
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Do we know what's past the edge of the universe? I guess I'm asking if C is constant outside of space as well as inside, or if C could be exceeded relative to what is outside of space.
Or is that a stupid question?
There appears to be stuff past the edge of the universe:
It is barely possible that the fundamental constants vary over a scale larger than the visible universe, but I wouldn't bet on it.
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If you want to know more about the timeline of the Big Bang, the Starts with a Bang blog has a series of articles on it named "The Greatest Story Ever Told"; it starts here [scienceblogs.com] and continues in these.
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Just curious, but what source are you using for this timeline? I've heard the same thing described with small variations between them here and there, and I'm trying to figure out which is believed to be the most accurate of them so far. In the one I remember the most, all of the initial hydrogen and helium nuclei (with tiny amounts of heavier atomic nuclei) were formed within the first three minutes of the initial bang. Things didn't cool off enough for the electrons to join them to form atoms until arou
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21 minutes - God realizes he forgot to carry a one. "Ah crap, this is going to create humans. Well, too late now. Might as well have some fun with this iteration."
Lucifer: There are going to be humans in this universe?! No way am I putting up with their shit again. I'm outta here, who's with me?
First collisions...not involving a baguette (Score:5, Funny)
More than 1h of stable beam... (Score:2, Funny)
...and no blackhole yet !
http://mediaarchive.cern.ch/MediaArchive/Photo/Public/2010/1003062/1003062_07/1003062_07-A4-at-144-dpi.jpg :)
MIT Ph.D now out of work (Score:5, Funny)
Hangs up his orange suit and crowbar.
First Collisions at the LHC (Score:4, Funny)
Whoever it was, I hope they're insured.
FlashForward (Score:2)
I just blacked out! I had a dream/vision where I saw myself eating a meatloaf sandwitch and chips..oh..sorry..that's a TV show. Or is it?
Aaaaand it's down! (Score:2)
Good while it lasted!
1 and half year late and half power (Score:2)
---
The blogosphere has plenty on the LHC as you can see at:
LHC [feeddistiller.com] Feed @ Feed Distiller [feeddistiller.com]
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Apparently the side effects of this experiment is time travel forward several minutes. Oh, and the emitting of large amounts of bogons [wiktionary.org].
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So does that mean we get to see kdawsons latest dupe before he even (re)writes it ?
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How about now?
I had this image in my head of them finding it in the first collision and then shutting down this hugely expensive experiment as redundant now that the HB was found.
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No. [slashdot.org]
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So given that the west is slowly dying under a load of debt and bad demographics, this was a useful endeavor because ... ?
... its a more useful way to spend our remaining time and money, than the alternatives?
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Because it could lead to the ability to assemble highly complex items from simple particles?
If you know how matter is put together, you're on the path to turning lead into gold.
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(yes im being pretty polemic about but everytime someone complains about "bad demographics" as a problem it just sends chills through my spine)
Actually you're just being less subtle about your disgust at racism than the OP was being about their racism (not that it was very subtle).
Anyway, my question is, how exactly does he imagine we're going to save "The West" without doing any research? When science and technology are among your big advantages, you don't turn around a decline by abandoning them.
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That's what you think.
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You forgot this pic of Gordon Freeman practicing for a headcrab invasion [1up.com].
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This is what makes me laugh about the whole religion thing.
If God [or-substitute-deity-of-your-choice] really is an omnipotent being, how could he let this happen ? He must have known by giving us free will, we were going to use it ?
Even the earliest cavemen probably took apart animals and other cavemen to see how they worked. You'd think he might of had a bit of foresight and brought a rain of frogs or an earth shattering meteor down upon us before we got to the LHC elementary particle level of curiosity.
"
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Yeah, a pigeon with a piece of bread just doesn't seem to measure up to Old Testament standards.
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I mention old people not as foreign beings, but as the pair of 80 year old parents I have to drive to said church bingo game every day. The age of my parents should give you enough information to determine that I am in fact plenty old enough to have made a decision on religion a long time ago (for myself).
And unlike religions in general, I have no wish to force my views on anybody else, it was merely a suggestion.
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Just to be pedantic right back at ya.
Omnipotence from the Latin "Omni Potens" (all powerful). That would kind of imply the power of omniscience also.
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Did you hear a whooshing sound too?