lhc



The LHC - The Large Hadron Collider ( LHC )

The Large Hadron Collider is the largest and most complex scientific instrument ever built and the highest energy particle accelerator in the world. The accelerator is located 100 m underground and runs through both French and Swiss territory. ( 27km circumference) Year 2008 September 10th, marks the culmination of 20 years of work by over 8000 scientists thousands of engineers, technicians and support staff from over 80 different countries. some critics say that this could create a black hole and suck up the entire world. but many say that even if a black hole is created it will vanish within a millionth of a second.. for more info follow these links. (i think the best footage/documentary from the LHC) www.youtube.com lhc-first-beam.web.cern.ch www.youtube.com www.youtube.com au.news.yahoo.com this video is done by Chris Mann, (the link: lhc-first-beam.web.cern.ch ) CERN- European organization for nuclear research /lhc first beam. Hope this video must have been useful. Please subscribe, leave a comment or rate, i would love to see your feedback! Thanks



Large Hadron Rap

Rappin' about CERN's Large Hadron Collider! Links below... Apparently YouTube fixed the sound! Still, Will Barras made two options trying to get around the original problems: Other YouTube:www.youtube.com Vimeo: www.vimeo.com Vimeo is downloadable if you log in. There has been a lot of interest in the original mp3, lyrics, and vocals for remixing. You can find all that here: www.msu.edu There's also been interest in translation. You can get a subtitle-free version from Vimeo here (downloadable): www.vimeo.com With backing track available here (with and without Hawking-style voice): barras.ws Go ahead and translate, rap it, and post it! Just give us a shout-out, and it's probably a good idea to include the following credits ;-) Images came from: particlephysics.ac.uk, space.com, the Institute of Physics, NASA, Symmetry, and Marvel I forgot Einstein Online, and they called me out: www.einstein-online.info And I forgot Physics World (dunno what I was thinking when I put together the extra dimensions bit). Steve Abel set me to rights (but made no demands) physicsworld.com The talented dancers doubled as camera people, with some work by Neil Dixon. Stock footage is CERN's. Will Barras is responsible for the killa beats: www.ling.ed.ac.uk And thanks to MC Hawking, who first thought of using computer-voice to bring Stephen Hawking to the world of rap :-) www.mchawking.com The rapper has a day job (we agree this is a good thing) as a science writer. www.katemcalpine.com They'll ...



The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) - The Big Bang Experiment

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the world's largest and highest-energy particle accelerator . It is expected to address some of the most fundamental questions of physics, advancing the understanding of the deepest laws of nature. The LHC lies in a tunnel 27 kilometres (17 mi) in circumference, as deep as 175 metres (574 ft) beneath the Franco-Swiss border nearGeneva, Switzerland. This synchrotron is designed to collide opposing particle beams of either protons at an energy of 7 teraelectronvolts (7 TeV or 1.12 microjoules) per nucleon, or lead nuclei at an energy of 574 TeV (92.0 µJ) per nucleus (2.76 TeV per nucleon). The term hadron refers to particles composed of quarks. The Large Hadron Collider was built by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) with the intention of testing various predictions of high-energy physics, including testing for the existence of the hypothesized Higgs boson and of the large family of new particles predicted by supersymmetry. It was built in collaboration with over 10000 scientists and engineers from over 100 countries, as well as hundreds of universities and laboratories. Credit to Original Uploader



Hand back into the Large Hadron Collider - Sixty Symbols

A while back we pondered what would happen if your hand was hit by the Large Hadron Collider's proton beam - this time we're asking the people who work there! Our original video is at: www.youtube.com Visit our website at www.sixtysymbols.com We're on Facebook at www.facebook.com And Twitter at twitter.com Sixty Symbols videos by Brady Haran



Inside the Large Hadron Collider (CMS) - Sixty Symbols

Professor Ed Copeland shows us inside the CMS Experiment at the Large Hadron Collider - will it find the elusive Higgs Boson? We'll be uploading another film from the sister experiment ATLAS very soon! CMS stands for Compact Muon Solenoid and is one of the experiments on the main ring at the Large Hadron Collider. The CMS website is: cms.web.cern.ch Professor Ed Copeland is particle physicist at the University of Nottingham. Visit our website at www.sixtysymbols.com We're on Facebook at www.facebook.com And Twitter at twitter.com Sixty Symbols videos by Brady Haran



Inside ATLAS at the Large Hadron Collider - Sixty Symbols

The mighty ATLAS detector is searching for the Higgs Boson - one of a few experiments at the Large Hadron Collider. See our earlier video at the CMS Experiment: www.youtube.com And an overview of the LHC at: www.youtube.com This video features Tony Padilla from the University of Nottingham. Visit our website at www.sixtysymbols.com We're on Facebook at www.facebook.com And Twitter at twitter.com This project features scientists from The University of Nottingham Sixty Symbols videos by Brady Haran



A quick look around the LHC (HD)

Oxford Sparks presents a visit to the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva. Find out more and explore other LHC resources at www.oxfordsparks.net. No protons were harmed in the making of this animation.



Petabytes of data at Large Hadron Collider - Sixty Symbols

This question is posed on behalf of many Sixty Symbols viewers who asked about it. With thanks to David Barney and Steven Goldfarb, from CMS and ATLAS respectively. See more of our videos from the LHC at www.youtube.com Visit our website at www.sixtysymbols.com We're on Facebook at www.facebook.com And Twitter at twitter.com This project for the The University of Nottingham is by video journalist Brady Haran



CERN News - LHC to run at 4 TeV per beam in 2012

The LHC will run with a beam energy of 4 TeV this year, 0.5 TeV higher than in 2010 and 2011. This decision was taken by CERN management following the annual performance workshop held in Chamonix last week and a report delivered today by the external CERN Machine Advisory Committee (CMAC). It is accompanied by a strategy to optimise LHC running to deliver the maximum possible amount of data in 2012 before the LHC goes into a long shutdown to prepare for higher energy running. The data target for 2012 is 15 inverse femtobarns for ATLAS and CMS, three times higher than in 2011. Bunch spacing in the LHC will remain at 50 nanoseconds.



Uncovering the Universe: Latest news from the LHC

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN is the most powerful particle collider ever built and has been described as the world's biggest science experiment. Designed to answer the unknowns in particle physics, including the reason for so little antimatter in the universe and the exact locations of dark matter and the missing Higgs particle, the LHC is capable of recreating the conditions that were in existence one fraction of a second after the Big Bang. Tara takes the stage at The Royal Institution to reveal what has been discovered at the LHC since its first year of operation. This event took place at the Ri on Wednesday 19 October 2011.



High above the LHC - Sixty Symbols

Before going inside, here is a visual and conversational "overview" of the Large Hadron Collider with Professor Ed Copeland. Visit our website at www.sixtysymbols.com We're on Facebook at www.facebook.com And Twitter at twitter.com Sixty Symbols videos by Brady Haran



LHC: Concerns examined

LHC: Concerns examined. (Original title: "LHC Concerns and Recent Happenings"). Video imported from: www.youtube.com [ Text imported from cited channel: Subido por harismind el 01/10/2008. " Concerns on the Large Hadron Collider examined " ] It also can be seen at: www.youtube.com



Putting your hand in the Large Hadron Collider...

More answers to questions from Sixty Symbols viewers, covering the LHC, exploding stars and galaxies made of anti-matter. Part One is at www.youtube.com



Will the LHC destroy the world? - Sixty Symbols

CERN's Large Hadron Collider will NOT destroy our planet. But many of you asked about it - and the "scenarios" are a good excuse to discuss some cool physics. Dr Tony Padilla discusses a few doomsday theories from the very centre of the famed accelerator ring. Stand back and keep an eye out for black holes and strangelets!!! Visit our website at www.sixtysymbols.com We're on Facebook at www.facebook.com And Twitter at twitter.com This project features scientists from The University of Nottingham Sixty Symbols videos by Brady Haran



What's new @CERN ? n2 LHC performance

In this second episode: LHC performance, a journey to the particle source and this past month's news.



Brian Cox - Large Hadron Collider

Cox discusses the LHC, elementary particles, the standard model and the forces of nature throughout the universe.



Large Hadron Collider - Michael Peskin (SETI Talks)

It's finally here! Thanks for your patience! SETI Talks Archive: seti.org The Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, has begun its study of physics at distances 10000 times smaller than an atomic nucleus. This accelerator and its experiments are enormous in many respects---in the physical size of the facilites, in the sizes of the experimental teams, but also in the stakes for our understanding of elementary particles, mass, and the universe. In this colloquium, Dr. Peskin will describe the physics questions that motivate the LHC experiments, the detectors that are designed to meet these goals, and the challenges that the experiments must overcome. Dr. Peskin will show some of the first results from the LHC, including the status of the search for the much-anticipated Higgs boson.



Maplestory LHC Levels [155-157] - Crazy Sleep Stories

Yeah this is me leveling at LHC, I will probably not record videos at LHC again because this was MAJOR laggy. Thank you and please like the video comment and subscribe :]



LHC Debunks Super String Theory & Higgs Boson Particle (Mirror)

Oldie but a goodie.....ORIGINAL VIDEO: www.youtube.com



LHC collisions at new world-record energy (8 TeV)!

A real proton-proton collision event with a centre-of-mass energy of 8 TeV[1], as seen in the CMS detector on 5th April, 2012. The LHC circulates bunches of protons, each containing hundreds of billions of protons. When the bunches, travelling in opposite directions inside the LHC, cross inside CMS, multiple collisions of pairs of protons occur. In this event, 23 pairs of protons collide, resulting in the production of a high number of particles. Read CMS news item on the first collisions at 8 TeV: cms.web.cern.ch Animation copyright: CERN, for the benefit of the CMS collaboration Animation production: Loic Quertenmont [1] TeV = Tera Electronvolt: lhc-machine-outreach.web.cern.ch



Large Hadron Collider - The Search For The Higgs FULL

THIS POST IS DUE TO TODAY'S NEWS (December 13, 2011) LINK: www.bbc.co.uk www.bbc.co.uk On November, 2007 the most complex scientific instrument ever built will be switched on. The Large Hadron Collider promises to recreate the conditions in the early universe. By revisiting the beginning of time, scientists hope to unravel some of the deepest secrets of our Universe. Within these first few moments the building blocks of the Universe were formed. The search for these fundamental particles has occupied scientists for decades but there remains one particle that has stubbornly refused to appear in any experiment. The Higgs Boson is so crucial to our understanding of the Universe that it has been dubbed the God particle. It explains how fundamental particles acquire mass, or as one scientist plainly states: "It is what makes stuff stuff..."



CERN News - Physics restarts in the LHC at new record energy

Date- 30th Mar 12 Source- cdsweb.cern.ch 'The LHC has started proton collisions at the unprecedent energy of 4 TeV per beam. This video celebrates the new milestone and explains the physics challenges and ecxpectations for the two larger experiments ATLAS and CMS through the words of the current physics coordinators Richard Hawkings and Greg Landsberg.'



The Large Hadron Collider

A 10' overview of the LHC project and its research plans



Hanging out at the LHC: CMS, ATLAS and CERN control rooms - Part 1

CMS, along with the ATLAS experiment and CERN, organised a Google+ Hangout inviting you into the nerve centres controlling the Large Hadron Collider as well as its two general-purpose experiments, CMS and ATLAS: cern.ch This is the full video of Part 1 of the two-part Hangout, held at the start of the LHC's world-record-breaking run at an energy of 8 TeV (or teraelectronvolt). Part 2 can be found here: cern.ch More information CMS: Website -- cern.ch Google+ page -- gplus.to ATLAS: Website -- atlas.ch Google+ page -- http CERN: Website -- cern.ch Google+ page -- http



Dr. Tara Shears - The LHC: the world's largest experiment.

The LHC: or how the world's largest experiment can investigate matter's smallest constituents. Public lecture on 21 June 2007 at The Royal Society, London. Go here if you want to see the lecture with slides: royalsociety.tv By Dr. Tara Shears, Royal Society University Research Fellow, University of Liverpool. Deep beneath the Swiss countryside, final touches are being made to the world's largest piece of scientific equipment the Large Hadron Collider (or LHC for short). The LHC is the most powerful particle accelerator ever built. It is capable of recreating the very energetic conditions last seen in the universe a billionth of a second after the Big Bang, and allows particle physicists to study the fundamental ingredients of matter that the universe was formed of at the time. Amazingly, it will do this 40 million times a second, and use enormous high tech experiments to record what happens. Why would we want to go to such lengths to explore the structure of matter? In this lecture, Tara Shears will discuss how the LHC will help scientists learn more about the nature of matter and expand the frontiers of our knowledge further than ever. Tara Shears is a particle physicist and Royal Society University Research Fellow at the University of Liverpool. Since obtaining her PhD in 1995 she has worked on experiments at CERN, the European Centre for Particle Physics, in Switzerland, and at Fermilab in America. Her research interests focus on the properties of bottom quarks and the ...



CERN Video News: LHC performance workshop in Chamonix 2012

Date- 13th Feb 12 Source- cdsweb.cern.ch 'CERN Video News on the LHC performance workshop in Chamonix in Feb 2012 with interviews to Steve Myers, director for accelerators and Sergio Bertlucci, director for research.'



Science at Cal - Beate Heinemann - The Quest for the Higgs Boson at Large Hadron Collider

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) was built in the past decade near Geneva at the border of Switzerland and France, and is now operating since last year at the world's highest energy. A primary objective of the LHC is to either discover or dispute the so-called Higgs boson. The Higgs boson was first hypothesized nearly 50 years ago in 1964 in order to find a mechanism by which all particles that make up the matter in our Universe acquire mass. Just in the last year the LHC has made significant progress in its search for the Higgs boson. Particularly at the end of 2011 initial search results were observed that show tantalizing hints that a discovery might be very near which received a broad echo within the scientific community and the popular press. In my lecture will describe the LHC and its experiments, the relevance of the Higgs boson and the current state of the experimental searches. Beate Heinemann received her Diploma and PhD from the University of Hamburg in Germany, working on the HERA electron-proton collider. From 2006-2006 she was a fellow at the University of Liverpool in the United Kingdom, working with the Tevatron near Chicago. In 2006 she was appointed Associate Professor of Physics at the University of California, Berkeley. She works both on precision measurements of known processes, and on searches for new unknown particles, eg for the Higgs boson, supersymmetric particles and extra dimensions.



CERN News - Physics restarts in the LHC at new record energy

The LHC has started proton collisions at the unprecedent energy of 4 TeV per beam. This video celebrates the new milestone and explains the physics challenges and ecxpectations for the two larger experiments ATLAS and CMS through the words of the current physics coordinators Richard Hawkings and Greg Landsberg. Le LHC vient de démarrer les collisions entre protons à l'energie sans précédents de 4 TeV par faisceau. Cette vidéo marque cette nouvelle phase du programme de l'accélérateur et décrit les défis et les attentes des physiciens de ATLAS et CMS à travers les mots des coordinateurs de physiques en charge actuellement, Richard Hawkings et Greg Landsberg.



Bluffer's guide to the Large Hadron Collider

For those of us who wish we'd paid more attention in GCSE physics, here's our bluffers guide to everything you need to know about the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. God particles? Time travel? Black holes? Faster-than-light neutrinos? Hadrons? Bosons? It's all here - just click play on the video. You'll laugh, you'll cry, and you might even learn something.



Large Hadron Collider Achieves 400 Trillion Collisions

www.quicknuclearscience.webs.com The large hadron collider (LHC) achieves 400 Trillion collisions, almost 6 inverse femptobarns. The proton proton run is over, and the LHC will be trying to collide lead ions with protons to probe their structure, and then switch to lead ion lead ion collisions.



No Higgs [at the LHC]

Anthem of a young theoretical physicist. Here are the lyrics: You could talk aged one And read Hamlet aged two Wrote cuneiform script And spoke latin Beat deep blue at chess Memory flawless Built a robot To clean your room Started school aged three And finished aged four You knew twice as much As your teachers They were so confused By the maths you used Well you loved to count In base thirteen Oh I hope they find no Higgs At the LHC No extra dimensions No supersymmetry Oh it's the only way To set all those smart kids free You won every prize, They were twice your size In the schoolyard they beat You unconscious Finished high school bore Twice the perfect score Started uni when You were ten It was easy still Yet more of a thrill All the pieces were Coming together You took every course And aced them of course All that algebra and calculus Geometry, analysis, Mechanics, Relativity And finally string theory I hope they find no Higgs At the LHC No extra dimensions No supersymmetry Oh it's the only way To set all those smart kids free It's the hardest there is So that's what you do It makes you feel dumb And retarded But you think what the hell And you dive right in And decide that you"ll Make it work But now years have passed And progress is slim You still don't know what You're doing You're tied up with strings And you don't think it's true But now that you started You want to pull through They make conjectures, but never predictions Unfalsifiable, pointless, it's fiction ...



CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC)

A video giving a tour of the LHC (underground accelerator) at CERN. Measuring 27km in circumference, it will become the world's largest particle accelerator. The first beams are due for injection mid-June 2008 with the first collisions planned to take place 2 months later. The LHC will become the world's largest and highest-energy particle accelerator. For more information, see: en.wikipedia.org lhc.web.cern.ch



Higgs Boson Mass Range Excluded By LHC

www.quicknuclearscience.webs.com The LHC has excluded the higgs boson's mass range between 141-476 GeV, also next year it will look at the lower end of the spectrum to hopefully find or exclude the higgs all together.



The LHC and Alex's Survey

In which Hank takes Alex Day's survey and talks about his interview this morning with Joe Incandela of the CMS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. Joe is a pretty famous particle physicist, so it was amazing to get his take on the reality of quantum mechanics, the flaws of the standard model, and the realities of running the largest scientific experiment in the world: www.youtube.com Alex's original video is here: www.youtube.com I got the Dalek Poster here: dft.ba



Superstring Theory proven wrong by LHC - Supersymmetry debunked, String Theory wrong

Did the Large Hadron Collider Just Debunk Superstring Theory? www.pcmag.com



CERN News - May 29, 2011: New LHC record of 1000 bunches

The LHC breaks 3 new World records: - 1000 bunches colliding - Highest luminosity (1.2x10^33) - Highest beam energy (73Mj)



FOP 2009 ● FROM WALTON TO THE LHC ● Cormac O'Raifeartaigh WIT

This seminar features a brief overview of the forthcoming experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world's most powerful particle accelerator. The relevance of the work of Ernest Walton, Ireland's Nobel laureate in physics, will be explained. Experiments that will search for physics beyond the Standard Model will also be discussed. Cormac O'Raifeartaigh lectures in mathematics and physics at Waterford Institute of Technology. He has a PhD in physics from Trinity College Dublin and is a frequent participant in scientific debates in the Irish media. He writes regularly on science in newspapers and magazines and is the author of the well-known science blog ANTIMATTER. FRONTIERS OF PHYSICS TEACHERS' CONFERENCE 2009 Date: 26th September 2009 Venue: Waterford Institute of Technology Camera: Marek Bogacki Produced by DOCUMENTAVI 2009



Review: Large Hadron Collider

Today's topic is the Large Hadron Collider, a bold choice given that none of us know anything about particle accelerators. To those of you who do, feel free to angrily comment on any mistakes you notice. I assure you that we'll take them super seriously. I'd also like to take this opportunity to apologize in advance to Switzerland for some of the things we said.



LEGO Model of the Large Hadron Collider

As we write, scientists are trying to find out whether the elusive Higgs boson particle was glimpsed at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, fueling huge excitement. If the particle, also known as the God particle, was actually there, it will make physics history. The LHC scientists do not yet have enough data to claim a discovery. But in the meantime, at home in Copenhagen, one physicist Sascha Mehlhase from the Niels Bohr Institute has made a part of the collider, the Atlas detector, out of LEGO toy bricks.



Dr. Tara Shears - Uncovering the Universe, Latest News from the LHC

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN is the most powerful particle collider ever built and has been described as the world's biggest science experiment. Designed to answer the unknowns in particle physics, including the reason for so little antimatter in the universe and the exact locations of dark matter and the missing Higgs particle, the LHC is capable of recreating the conditions that were in existence one fraction of a second after the Big Bang. Dr. Tara Shears takes the stage at The Royal Institution to reveal what has been discovered at the LHC since its first year of operation. This event took place at the Ri on Wednesday 19 October 2011.



"LHC" - Rose Center 10th Anniversary Video Contest

My submission for the Rose Center 10th Anniversary Video Contest. amnh.org



Ri Discourse: Jon Butterworth - Electroweak Symmetry Breaking and the LHC

Professor Jon Butterworth, member of the High Energy Physics group on the Atlas experiment, provides an overview of his work at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This Ri Discourse took place on Friday 3 February 2012.



Data Processing at the LHC

Google Tech Talk February 8, 2011 Presented by Bob Jones, CERN IT Department, IT EU Project Leader ABSTRACT CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, is one of the world's largest and most respected centres for scientific research. Its business is fundamental physics, finding out what the Universe is made of and how it works. CERN has recently completed the construction of the LHC, the world's largest and most powerful particle accelerator. Thousands of scientists around the world have contributed to constructing the sophisticated LHC experiments and they are now eagerly waiting to get their hands on more data to extract the physics during the next fifteen years, the expected lifetime of the LHC. To reach this goal, tens of thousands of computers distributed worldwide are being harnessed in a distributed computing network called the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG). This supports the offline computing needs of the LHC experiments, connecting and combining the IT power of more than 150 computer centres in more than 30 countries. The rapid increase in performance of the LHC accelerator is having an impact on the computing requirements since it increases the rate, complexity and quantity of data that the LHC experiments need to store, distribute and process. The previous estimates of 15 Petabytes per year of stored data are already looking conservative and so it is necessary to plan to go well beyond this figure. This presentation will give an overview of CERN ...



Why Physicists Need the Large Hadron Collider

Google Tech Talks October 17, 2008 ABSTRACT The LHC is the biggest (27 kilometers around) scientific instrument ever built and it is now ramping up to start taking data. It smashes together protons at enormous energy in order to create new forms of matter. Physicists hope to find the Higgs Boson which is the missing link in our current theory. Hopefully unanticipated discoveries will be made. I will explain why physicists need this expensive tool in order to understand nature at the smallest distance scales. Speaker: Edward Farhi Edward Farhi was trained as a theoretical particle physicist but has also worked on astrophysics, general relativity, and the foundations of quantum mechanics. His present interest is the theory of quantum computation. As a graduate student, Farhi invented the jet variable "Thrust," which is used to describe how particles in high energy accelerator collisions come out in collimated streams. He then worked with Leonard Susskind on grand unified theories with electro-weak dynamical symmetry breaking. He and Larry Abbott proposed an (almost viable) model in which quarks, leptons, and massive gauge bosons are composite. With Robert Jaffe, he worked out many of the properties of a possibly stable super dense form of matter called "Strange Matter" and with Charles Alcock and Angela Olinto he studied the properties of "Strange Stars." His interest then shifted to general relativity and he and Alan Guth studied the classical and quantum prospects of ...



Dr. Tara Shears - Giving an update on the Large Hadron Collider at Lift11 Geneva

Tara Shears of CERN (The European Organization for Nuclear Research) gives us an update on the LHC, one of the biggest science experiments in history. They are ramping up the power of the accelerator in 2011 and 2012 to find the Higgs Boson, they are creating and capturing antimatter and she explains how the 3000 particle physicists at CERN can collaborate on research.



Less than 1 minute LHC Data.How many USB keys are needed to store the LHC data?

Less than 1 minute LHC Data.How many USB keys are needed to store the LHC data? Produced by: CERN Video Productions Director: CERN Video Productions 1:00 min. / 05 December 2011 / © 2011 CERN www.cern.ch



Poll 78 - LHC and Extra Dimensions

To read along go to imaginingthetenthdimension.blogspot.com Other links from this entry: imaginingthetenthdimension.blogspot.com www.newscientist.com www.newscientist.com arxiv.org motls.blogspot.com www.popsci.com www.zdnet.co.uk



Dr. Tara Shears - Back to the Big Bang: the Large Hadron Collider

TARA SHEARS start talking at 37:31 Dr. Tara Shears, Lyn Evans. From: The IET Young Professionals Event 19 May 2009 Go here if you want to see the lecture with slides: scpro.streamuk.com About the speakers: Tara began her scientific career in 1991 by taking a PhD in particle physics with the University of Cambridge, where she analyzed data from the OPAL experiment at CERN and measured the lifetime of one particular fundamental particle - the bottom quark. After her PhD she remained on the OPAL experiment, first with a PPARC postdoctoral fellowship and then a CERN fellowship, investigating the production of W bosons. Lyn Evans is recognized world-wide as an outstanding expert in particle accelerators. The citation for his election as a Fellow of the American Physical Society, for example, was for contributions to the physics of particle accelerators and storage rings, in particular to the development of the understanding of the fundamental limitations of high-energy hadron colliding beam devices. About the presentation: The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has been described as the worlds largest scientific experiment, and physicists and engineers from all over the world have invested years of effort in designing and constructing it. Yet, despite its size, the LHC has been built to study the very smallest components of the universe. Although we know a lot about these fundamental building blocks of nature from previous experiments, weve realised that we need to discover and ...



How to use the Large Hadron Collider as a Time Machine

In this video, Marc Ganley is on a quest to discover how CERN's Large Hadron Collider could be used to facilitate time travel. Marc interviews scientists, professors and other important people in the know to see if our dreams of visiting different eras could finally be realised with the help of physics. Could the LHC be used as a cosmic portal to the past or the future? Hit play to find out.



CERN News - Physics restarts in the LHC at new record energy

CERN video announcing that the LHC now runs at 8TeV

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