Introduction to the world-leading science and technology at STFC
Tags: technology, Particle physics, Daresbury Laboratory, science
A visit to the “Universe of Particles” exhibit in the public outreach area at the European Center for High Energy Physics (CERN) is captured in this movie, taken in July of 2010. The movie records arrival at the reception point outside of CERN and entry into the large wooden dome that houses the exhibit, groups of people interacting with the hands-on exhibits, and the English version of the presentation that occurs at 15 minutes past each hour. (The French version is presented also each hour, a half an hour later.) There is a steady flow of visitors who stay for extended periods of time, and appear to enjoy the exhibits and explanations the purposes of research at the Large Hadron Collider and the experiments being carried out using its colliding proton beams. Many universities, including ours, are involved in this research. This film was shot entirely on an iPhone (version 4) and edited on the spot using iMovie; it has been slightly trimmed down here for uploading onto YouTube.
Tags: Particle physics, high energy physics, Large Hadron Collider, public outreach
LHC (Large Hadron Collider), CERN, Genève : First 7 TeV Collisions (30 March 2010, ±12 h GMT). LHC (Grand Collisionneur de Hadrons), CERN : premières collisions réalisées à 7 TeV ( 30 Mars 2010, ±13 heures, heure française). CERN : cdsweb.cern.ch : public.web.cern.ch
Tags: 30 March 2010, Switzerland, gluon, accélérateur
LHC (Large Hadron Collider), CERN, Genève : First 7 TeV Collisions (30 March 2010, ±12 h GMT). LHC (Grand Collisionneur de Hadrons), CERN : premières collisions réalisées à 7 TeV ( 30 Mars 2010, ±13 heures, heure française). CERN : cdsweb.cern.ch : public.web.cern.ch
Tags: cern 2010, 7 tev, 30 mars 2010, colisionador de hadrones
LHC (Large Hadron Collider), CERN, Genève : First 7 TeV Collisions (30 March 2010, ±12 h GMT). LHC (Grand Collisionneur de Hadrons), CERN : premières collisions réalisées à 7 TeV ( 30 Mars 2010, ±13 heures, heure française). CERN : cdsweb.cern.ch : public.web.cern.ch
Tags: Muon, colisionador de hadrones, Large Hadron Collider, LHC
LHC (Large Hadron Collider), CERN, Genève : First 7 TeV Collisions (30 March 2010, ±12 h GMT). LHC (Grand Collisionneur de Hadrons), CERN : premières collisions réalisées à 7 TeV ( 30 Mars 2010, ±13 heures, heure française). CERN : cdsweb.cern.ch : public.web.cern.ch
Tags: 7 tev, CERN, LHC, beam of particles
LHC (Large Hadron Collider), CERN, Genève : First 7 TeV Collisions (30 March 2010, ±12 h GMT). LHC (Grand Collisionneur de Hadrons), CERN : premières collisions réalisées à 7 TeV ( 30 Mars 2010, ±13 heures, heure française). CERN : cdsweb.cern.ch : public.web.cern.ch
Tags: Grand collisionneur de hadrons, Large Hadron Collider, collider, cern 2010
LHC (Large Hadron Collider), CERN, Genève : First 7 TeV Collisions (30 March 2010, ±12 h GMT). LHC (Grand Collisionneur de Hadrons), CERN : premières collisions réalisées à 7 TeV ( 30 Mars 2010, ±13 heures, heure française). CERN : cdsweb.cern.ch : public.web.cern.ch
Tags: Large Hadron Collider, proton, 03/30/2010, science
About this talk In this short talk from TED U 2009, Brian Cox shares what’s new with the CERN supercollider. He covers the repairs now underway and what the future holds for the largest science experiment ever attempted. About Brian Cox Physicist Brian Cox has two jobs: working with the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, and explaining big science to the general public. He’s a professor at the University of Manchester
Tags: accident, Vrian Cox, Large Hadron Collider, science
The 2008 Herzberg Lecture took place November 4, 2008 at Carleton University. Rolf-Dieter Heuer has been designated as the next Director General of CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. He has contributed to the study of electron positron interactions, the development of experimental techniques, and the construction of large detector systems. Despite great success, many key questions in particle physics and cosmology are unanswered. In particular, some 95% of the Universe consists of unknown dark matter and dark energy. Particle physics is about to enter the Terascale, providing a deeper understanding of the Universe and possibly dramatically changing our view of the world. With the start-up of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN this year, we expect revolutionary results explaining the origin of matter, unraveling the nature of dark matter and providing glimpses of extra spatial dimensions or grand unification of forces and hints on dark energy.
Tags: LHC, CERN, Rolf-Dieter Heuer, faculty of science