geronimo89:

This is awesome. 
A Lego model of the Large Hadron Collider. 

geronimo89:

This is awesome. 

A Lego model of the Large Hadron Collider. 

roomthily:

Large Hadron Collider (Simon Norfolk)
via TRIANGULATION BLOG

roomthily:

Large Hadron Collider (Simon Norfolk)

via TRIANGULATION BLOG

unknownskywalker:

Shutting Off the Large Hadron ColliderHow particle beams are brought to a safe halt
Engineers at particle accelerators must be able to halt intense beams of particles during routine shut-downs or emergencies. At the Large Hadron Collider researchers have devised an elaborate off-ramp procedure able to bring beams of protons traveling at nearly the speed of light to a dead halt in a fraction of a second. The beams carry enough energy to melt a ton of copper.
At LHC, the “road” the beams travel is a sixteen-mile ring-shaped tunnel, and the off-ramp looks like an immense pencil — it’s a piece of graphite about three feet wide, 26 feet long, wrapped with steel, water cooled, and encased in concrete. The difficulty of stopping the proton beam isn’t the large number of protons involved, a hundred trillion or more at any moment. That sounds like a lot, but all those protons wouldn’t be enough to inflate a basketball.
Rather, the difficulty lies in the amount of energy in the protons. When the machine achieves full operation the energy of the protons will be about 360 mega-joules, equivalent to the energy of an aircraft carrier moving through the ocean at a speed of 20 knots. And all that energy is concentrated in a beam that’s thinner than a frail bit of thread.
The protons in the beams race around the LHC machine many thousands of times per second. When the machine is to be turned off the beam can be siphoned off, bunch by bunch, and shot sequentially into the graphite dump. The bunches are aimed so that they don’t all hit the graphite at the same place. This prevents a meltdown of the dump.
Source: InsideScience.org

unknownskywalker:

Shutting Off the Large Hadron Collider
How particle beams are brought to a safe halt

Engineers at particle accelerators must be able to halt intense beams of particles during routine shut-downs or emergencies. At the Large Hadron Collider researchers have devised an elaborate off-ramp procedure able to bring beams of protons traveling at nearly the speed of light to a dead halt in a fraction of a second. The beams carry enough energy to melt a ton of copper.

At LHC, the “road” the beams travel is a sixteen-mile ring-shaped tunnel, and the off-ramp looks like an immense pencil — it’s a piece of graphite about three feet wide, 26 feet long, wrapped with steel, water cooled, and encased in concrete. The difficulty of stopping the proton beam isn’t the large number of protons involved, a hundred trillion or more at any moment. That sounds like a lot, but all those protons wouldn’t be enough to inflate a basketball.

Rather, the difficulty lies in the amount of energy in the protons. When the machine achieves full operation the energy of the protons will be about 360 mega-joules, equivalent to the energy of an aircraft carrier moving through the ocean at a speed of 20 knots. And all that energy is concentrated in a beam that’s thinner than a frail bit of thread.

The protons in the beams race around the LHC machine many thousands of times per second. When the machine is to be turned off the beam can be siphoned off, bunch by bunch, and shot sequentially into the graphite dump. The bunches are aimed so that they don’t all hit the graphite at the same place. This prevents a meltdown of the dump.

Source: InsideScience.org

Phew.

ookii:


Higgs boson discovery rumours false, say Tevatron scientists
A spokesman for the Fermi    National Accelerator Laboratory told the Telegraph: “The rumour    of evidence for the Higgs boson is just that: a rumour, with no factual    basis.
“Beyond that, we don’t comment on rumours.”
Earlier, the laboratory’s    Twitter feed said: “Let’s    settle this: the rumors spread by one fame-seeking blogger are just rumors.    That’s it.”
The rumours had been flying around the internet since a physicist and blogger,    Tommaso Dorigo of the University of Padua, said that    in a blog post that he had heard “two different, possibly independent    sources” claiming that an experiment at the Tevatron had found convincing    evidence for the existence of the Higgs boson.
However, a second spokesman for Fermilab said: “Tommaso Dorigo’s blog is    not a reliable source and is in no way supported by us.

Phew.

ookii:

Higgs boson discovery rumours false, say Tevatron scientists

A spokesman for the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory told the Telegraph: “The rumour of evidence for the Higgs boson is just that: a rumour, with no factual basis.

“Beyond that, we don’t comment on rumours.”

Earlier, the laboratory’s Twitter feed said: “Let’s settle this: the rumors spread by one fame-seeking blogger are just rumors. That’s it.

The rumours had been flying around the internet since a physicist and blogger, Tommaso Dorigo of the University of Padua, said that in a blog post that he had heard “two different, possibly independent sources” claiming that an experiment at the Tevatron had found convincing evidence for the existence of the Higgs boson.

However, a second spokesman for Fermilab said: “Tommaso Dorigo’s blog is not a reliable source and is in no way supported by us.

ookii:


LHC smashes beam collision record
BBC-Scientists working on the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) say they have moved a step closer to their aim of unlocking the mysteries of the Universe.
The world’s highest-energy particle accelerator has produced a record-breaking particle collision rate - about double the previous rate.
The collider is now generating around 10,000 particle collisions per second, according to physicist Andrei Golutvin.
The LHC is housed in a 27km circular tunnel under the French-Swiss border.
The vast machine is operated by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (Cern), based near Geneva in Switzerland.
Physicists say this marks the start of turning the LHC into the world’s most powerful particle collider.
“It’s clear that the LHC is the new boy in town, but in two years running we’re going to put Fermilab out of business,” operation group leader Mike Lamont told BBC News.
The Tevatron particle accelerator at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Illinois, USA, is the LHC’s rival. It has operated at higher intensities, but the current collision rate is a record for Cern.

ookii:

LHC smashes beam collision record

BBC-Scientists working on the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) say they have moved a step closer to their aim of unlocking the mysteries of the Universe.

The world’s highest-energy particle accelerator has produced a record-breaking particle collision rate - about double the previous rate.

The collider is now generating around 10,000 particle collisions per second, according to physicist Andrei Golutvin.

The LHC is housed in a 27km circular tunnel under the French-Swiss border.

The vast machine is operated by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (Cern), based near Geneva in Switzerland.

Physicists say this marks the start of turning the LHC into the world’s most powerful particle collider.

“It’s clear that the LHC is the new boy in town, but in two years running we’re going to put Fermilab out of business,” operation group leader Mike Lamont told BBC News.

The Tevatron particle accelerator at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Illinois, USA, is the LHC’s rival. It has operated at higher intensities, but the current collision rate is a record for Cern.

josephang:

Large Hadron Collider. It has got to be the work of a genius.

josephang:

Large Hadron Collider. It has got to be the work of a genius.

druggachusettes:

Come 2012, I’ll be prepared cause I played Half Life 2!

druggachusettes:

Come 2012, I’ll be prepared cause I played Half Life 2!

crumbles:

LHCb - Large Hadron Collider beauty experiment
LHCb has reconstructed an event having all characteristics of a Strange  Beauty Particle decay!

crumbles:

LHCb - Large Hadron Collider beauty experiment

LHCb has reconstructed an event having all characteristics of a Strange Beauty Particle decay!