Cern LHC sees high-energy success

Thanks to Panex for the link.
Original link

Delight in the LHC control room as the collisions are confirmed

Europe's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has produced record-breaking high-energy particle collisions.

Scientists working on the European machine have smashed beams of protons together at energies that are 3.5 times higher than previously achieved.

Tuesday's milestone marks the beginning of work that could lead to the discovery of fundamental new physics.

There was cheering and applause in the LHC control room as the first collisions were confirmed.

These seven-trillion-electronvolt (TeV) collisions have initiated 18-24 months of intensive investigations at the LHC.

Scientists hope the studies will bring novel insights into the nature of the cosmos and how it came into being.

Many of them have described Tuesday's event as the beginning of a "new era in science".

But researchers caution that the data gathered from the sub-atomic impacts will take time to evaluate, and the public should not expect immediate results.

"Major discoveries will happen only when we are able to collect billions of events and identify among them the very rare events that could present a new state of matter or new particles," said Guido Tonelli, a spokesman for the CMS detector at the LHC.

"This is not going to happen tomorrow. It will require months and years of patient work," he told BBC News.
...
Continue reading

TAGGED: PHYSICS, TECHNOLOGY


RELATED CONTENT

Next Generation: Sneaking into a Cell

Megan Scudellari - TheScientist 7 Comments

Next Generation: Sneaking into a Cell

A nanoscale device measures electrical signals inside cells without causing damage

Can you really be addicted to the...

Polly Curtis - The Guardian 26 Comments


Photograph: Peter Dazeley/Getty Images
Can you really be addicted to the internet?

New DNA reader to bring promise

Sharon Begley - Reuters 10 Comments


Ion Torrent CEO and chairman Jonathan Rothberg
holds a semiconductor sequencing chip that will
be used in the new Proton semi-conductor based
genome sequencing machine in Guilford,
Connecticut, January 5, 2012.
Credit: Reuters/Michelle McLoughlin

Nanoscale wires defy quantum predictions

Edwin Cartlidge - nature 21 Comments

Atomic electrical components conduct just like conventional wires, giving a new lease of life to Moore's law.

Orangutans 'could video chat' between...

Dave Lee - BBC News 21 Comments

Riot rumours: how misinformation spread...

Rob Procter, Farida Vis and Alex... 42 Comments

MORE

MORE BY BBC

Catholic Church in anti-gay marriage...

BBC - BBC News - Scotland 97 Comments

"Governments do not have the authority to say what marriage is or to change its nature or to decree that people of the same sex can marry."

Time travel: light speed results cast...

BBC - BBC News Science & Environment 45 Comments

Physicists have confirmed the ultimate speed limit for the packets of light called photons - making time travel even less likely than thought.

Vatican recalls Irish papal envoy after...

BBC - BBC News website 54 Comments

"The fact that I have had thousands of messages from around the world speaks for itself about the impact and the way people feel," he said.

UPDATE: FALSE STORY Jerusalem rabbis...

BBC - BBC News website 154 Comments

A Jewish rabbinical court condemned to death by stoning a stray dog it feared was the reincarnation of a lawyer who insulted its judges, reports say.

BBC - Everything and Nothing

BBC - Youtube - wedontknowanything 93 Comments

BBC Richard Dimbleby Lecture 1996 -...

BBC - YouTube - GodTheHypothesis 47 Comments

MORE

Comments

Comment RSS Feed

Please sign in or register to comment