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Large Hadron Collider could "open door to new physics by yearend"

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Kshasty Donating Member (248 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 05:58 AM
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Large Hadron Collider could "open door to new physics by yearend"
The world's largest particle accelerator could provide key insights into the makeup of matter and change our view of physics as early as at the end of 2010, the director of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) said.

The LHC was restarted at the end of February and repeated its record collision energy output of 2.36 tera-electron volts (TeV) on March 8. Scientists plan to force the particles to collide at 7 TeV by the end of March.

The collider will run at 7 TeV through next year, before being shut down in 2012 to upgrade to full design energy of 14 TeV. It will then restart in 2013.

Speaking at a March 8 news conference, Rolf-Dieter Heuer said the LHC could start generating its first scientific breakthroughs into elusive dark matter as early as later this year, even while operating at half-capacity.

"We will open a door for new physics by the end of this year," Heuer told reporters. "It took several decades for us to understand the visible universe. This is all nicely explained by the standard model, but the big problem is that this is only 5 percent of the universe."

"If we can detect and understand dark matter, our knowledge will expand to encompass 30 percent of the universe, a huge step forward," he added.
The $5.6 billion international LHC project has involved more than 2,000 physicists from hundreds of universities and laboratories in 34 countries since 1984. Over 700 Russian physicists from 12 research institutes have taken part.

The collider, located 100 meters under the French-Swiss border with a circumference of 27 km, enables scientists to shoot subatomic particles round an accelerator ring at almost the speed of light, channeled by powerful fields produced by superconducting magnets.

In order to fire beams of protons round the vast underground circular device, the entire ring must be cooled by liquid helium to minus 271 degrees C, just two degrees above absolute zero.

By colliding particles in front of immensely powerful detectors, scientists hope to detect the Higgs boson, nicknamed the "God particle," which was hypothesized in the 1960s to explain how particles acquire mass. Discovering the particle could explain how matter appeared in the split-second after the Big Bang.

http://en.rian.ru/world/20100309/158131626.html
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RandomThoughts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 06:08 AM
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1. Well I read the wiki page on dark matter.
Edited on Tue Mar-09-10 06:08 AM by RandomThoughts
and they say you find a sub by a blank space in the ocean, if dark matter is said to really have no mass or effect on electrons but does have gravity, might it just be an advance cloaking technique? Or maybe a natural cloaking effect. Shift something outside of space time, but not far enough to not have gravity waves still spill over and you got an invisible gravity source.

If gravity bleeds across dimensions, then dark energy would just be seeing neighboring dimensions effecting this one, just like our gravity would spill over to other dimensions.

Shrug. Does that sound possible?
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girl gone mad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 06:51 AM
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2. Most likely it is just going to confirm the boring stuff we already know..
"proof" of the Higgs-boson, largely.

The best we can hope for is a mind blowingly unexpected result that doesn't match any known theory. I hate to say this, but Physics will remain in a sorry state of increasingly complex and untestable theories if all we get is what we've come to expect out of CERN. That is to say, predictable results that match multiple theories or are close enough that ideas only need to be slightly tweaked and we're still stuck with branes, multiple dimensions rolled up into nothing, m-theory and no reasonable interpretation of quantum gravity (IMO). My son and I argue about this all the time. My deep hope is that LHC data will clearly eliminate much of the goofiness we are currently stuck with, while he wants more confirmation of this goofiness.
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TheMadMonk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-09-10 12:17 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Odds are good that you'll both get your wish. nt
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