Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours!!!

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kwazdog

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\/\/\/\/\/ webcast!
http://webcast.cern.ch/



LHC First Beam on
10 September 2008


:eek::eek::eek::eek::yes::hmm::angry::hmm:

BLACK HOLE COULD SWALLOW EARTH!!? I THINK/FEEL THAT WE WILL LIVE, I DONT KNOW WHAT THEY ARE REALLY TRYING TO DO THO.(i can speculate, but not 100% sure) ALL I KNOW IS THAT WE ARE ALL ALIVE IN ONE HELL OVA TIME.

THIS BITCH IS GOING ONLINE IN A MATTER OF HOURS.



lhc1.jpg



http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2008/08/the_large_hadron_collider.html

EE Times: Latest News

Super-collider enabled by EEs








R. Colin Johnson
EE Times
(09/08/2008 10:18 PM EDT)

PORTLAND, Ore.—The world's most powerful particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), will attempt to form its first particle beam on Wednesday, Sept. 10th, enabled by EEs who designed its superconducting magnets, detectors and worldwide grid computing network.
The LHC was constructed at the CERN (Conseil Europeen pour la Recherche Nucleaire or European Council for Nuclear Research, Geneva). View a live webcast of the event at 4 a.m. Eastern Time Sept. 10, 2008 athttp://webcast.cern.ch/
The LHC consists of a 16-mile long ring of superconducting magnets--1232 dipole magnets each 49 feet long which are used to bend the beams, and 392 quadrupole magnets, each 16-to-22 feet long, to focus the particle beams--cooled with 60 tons of liquid helium to -456 degree Fahrenheit.

Trillions of protons accelerate around the ring 11,245 times a second to achieve 99.99 percent the speed of light, resulting in 600 million collisions per second. Two beams of protons traveling opposite directions will each achieve an energy of 7 TeV (tera-electronvolts), resulting to head-to-head collisions of 14 TeV--seven times greater than the most power accelerator today at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Batavia, Ill.)

Many experiments will be performed by the LHC that plumb the mysteries of the universe by recreating the conditions of the Big Bang--producing subatomic particles that have not been seen since the beginning of time itself. Mysteries that the LHC will hopefully resolve include the origin of matter and mass, the existence of extra dimensions, and the whereabouts of dark matter and dark energy, which are estimated to compose 96 percent of the universe, but which are invisible to physics today. The LHC will also attempt to create microscopic black holes--an experiment that doomsayers predict will swallow the Earth, but which scientists at CERN say are created naturally all the time when cosmic rays his the atmosphere, but which can now be studied by detectors in the LHC.

Throughout the construction of the detectors installed there in the LHC, electrical engineers have been instrumental to its success, according to University of Nebraska at Lincolm professor Ken Bloom.

"EEs have helped us design a general purpose detector that could capture whatever the new physics could be," said Bloom. "And there is electrical engineering through out the whole experiment--from its ultra-low noise amplifiers to its realtime computing systems."

One of the most important experiments to be performed by the LHC depends on the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) detector which is built around a huge solenoid magnet wtih a 12,500 ton yoke and using a cylindrical coil of superconducting cable that generates a magnetic field of 4 teslas--100,000 times that of the Earth's magnetic field.

"The CMS experiment is one of the two big general purpose experiments at the CERN Large Hadron Collider," said Bloom. "Our goal is to discover and explore new physical phenomena that we expect to observe in these high-energy particle collisions. There may even be extra dimensions of space besides the three that we are used to."

According to Bloom, who is the project manager for tier-two grid computing in the U.S., grid computing was the only option available to the engineers making the CMS at the LHC a reality.

"Just the raw data coming off the detector will be petabytes per year, for which we have had to reinvent grid computing to handle," said Bloom. "There will be millions of collisions per second, yet we can only process that data at about 100 Hz, which means the EEs had to design a high-speed online system that was smart enough to record only the collisions of interest. Even so, it was not possible to get enough power and computing into a single data center to handle these massive data sets, so we have gone to a distributed model that is enabled by the fact that we have high-speed networks to move the data around the world."

The six experiments at the LHC, including the CMS, will produce about 15 petabytes of data per year, which will be recorded and stored at CERN, but will be analyzed by a worldwide grid computing network made accessible to over 5,000 scientists around the globe.

The Worldwide LHC Computing Grid is facilitated by the the Open Science Grid, which has more than 60 sites in the US and five sites in Brazil, Taiwan and England. The Worldwide LHC Computing Grid consists of seven tier-one data centers (including Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and Brookhaven National Laboratory) which will partition the data sets into groups appropriate for the six experiments to be performed by LHC scientists. Finally, 40 tier-two data centers (including seven in the U.S.) will allow scientists to apply analytic algorithms to the data sets appropriate to their particular experiments. The U.S. data centers will provide more than 10 petabytes of disk cache for simulation and analysis.

The tier-one data centers are all connected by 10-Gbit per second fiber optic links which will be utilized around the clock to stream and partition the data into appropritate sets. The tier-two data centers in the U.S. will make use of the Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) and the Internet2.

U.S. funding was provided by the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Energy Office of Science.

http://webcast.cern.ch/
 
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Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

lhc18.jpg


lhc2.jpg


lhc3.jpg


lhc4.jpg



lhc5.jpg



lhc6.jpg


lhc7.jpg


lhc8.jpg


lhc9.jpg



lhc11.jpg


lhc12.jpg


lhc13.jpg



lhc14.jpg


lhc15.jpg

THIS IS SOME SERIOUS TECHNOLGY! LOOKS LIKE THE HULL OF A STARSHIP! I CANT TELL IF THIS PIC IS MICRO OR MACRO!!?

lhc16.jpg


lhc17.jpg


lhc19.jpg

DAMMIT ITS MACRO!:eek:


lhc20.jpg
 
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Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

I was afraid, this would happen...
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

I was afraid, this would happen...

TOMMARAH, 4 A.M. EASTERN STANDARD TIME. GET YOUR SPIRITUAL POPCORN READY! :)


EDIT: COULD IT BE A "KEY" OF SORTS? I DONT KNOW HOW MUCH I BELIVE THE STARGATE/QUARANTINE THEORIES, YA NEVER KNOW THO!? A LOT OF MONEY/NRG HAS GONE INTO THIS, AND THIS ISNT EVEN BLACK OPS!

quarantinedearth2.jpg
 
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Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

Mindboggling, monumental, insane, are a few words that come to mind...:yes:
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

Mindboggling, monumental, insane, are a few words that come to mind...:yes:

INDEED! THINGS WILL NEVER BE THE SAME AFTER TOMORROW! THERE IS A GREATER PLAN!:D

WE MUST REMAIN POSITIVE!
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

Well, if it does produce a black hole, shit will happen so fast you won't know what happen. :lol::lol::lol::lol:
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

LHC RAP SONG!



 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

LHC RAP SONG!


<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/j50ZssEojtM&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/j50ZssEojtM&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

Bump
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

:angry::angry::angry::angry::angry:

BUMP!!!

:angry::angry::angry::angry::angry:


:lol::lol::lol::dance:
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

TOMMARAH, 4 A.M. EASTERN STANDARD TIME. GET YOUR SPIRITUAL POPCORN READY! :)


EDIT: COULD IT BE A "KEY" OF SORTS? I DONT KNOW HOW MUCH I BELIVE THE STARGATE/QUARANTINE THEORIES, YA NEVER KNOW THO!? A LOT OF MONEY/NRG HAS GONE INTO THIS, AND THIS ISNT EVEN BLACK OPS!

quarantinedearth2.jpg



 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

The guy has a very compelling point but using Biblical terms to explain it is a mistake. There probably is a immoral motive behind these experiments, maybe demonic or satanic but something like 4 billion people have been waiting for the return of the anti-christ so this explanation will not moblize them against this machine.
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

<font size="4">
Its September 14th and no black holes or life as we know it changes;
Is that all, or, is there something else to come ???

</font size>
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

<font size="4">
Its September 14th and no black holes or life as we know it changes;
Is that all, or, is there something else to come ???

</font size>

YES! THE TESTS THAT WERE DONE WERE JUST "BEAM" TESTS. THEY SENT THE PARTICLES AROUND THE LHC TWICE, COUNTERCLOCKWISE AND CLOCKWISE! THE ACTUAL SMASHING DIDN'T TAKE PLACE YET!:eek:

THE SMASHING/ MICRO BIG BANG MAY TAKE PLACE AS EARLY AS OCTOBER OR AS LATE AS FEBRUARY... A LOT OF FOLK HAVE BEEN SAYING OCTOBER. IM NOT SURE IF THERE IS AN OFFICIAL DATE YET!!

THEY PLAN ON SMASHING PATICLES ON A FREQUENT BASIS!!! THAT WAS JUST THE BEGINNING!
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

Okay. Wake me up when its over.
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

<IFRAME SRC="http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/11/11/lhc.large.hadron.collider.beam/index.html" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/11/11/lhc.large.hadron.collider.beam/index.html">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

<IFRAME SRC="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8387789.stm" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8387789.stm">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

<font size="6">
Graphic: Inside the Large Hadron Collider
50803721.jpg

 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

Boondoggle
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

Thanks for keeping this thread updated Que & friends...:)
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

humans are the most dangerous species on the planet...

no animal is more careless, reckless, irresponsible, & destructive...
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

<font size="5"><center>
Large Hadron Collider smashes protons, record</font size>
<font size="4">

The $10-billion structure at Geneva collides particles at three
times previous energy levels. It hopes to find smaller
particles and make other physics discoveries.</font size></center>


52999783.jpg

Scientists of the European Organization for
Nuclear Research, or CERN, react in the Geneva
control room. The $10-billion Large Hadron Collider
directed two proton beams into each other at three
times more force than ever before. (Anja
Niedringhaus / Associated Press / March 30, 2010)

Los Angeles Times
By Amina Khan
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 30, 2010


The Large Hadron Collider in Geneva succeeded early Tuesday in colliding subatomic particles at three times the highest energy levels previously recorded.

Scientists gathered in a room at Caltech and in similar groups around the globe witnessed the achievement at 3:58 PDT.

"There were cheers in all the control rooms," said Caltech physicist Harvey Newman. "As soon as we get the data, we're analyzing it … it's been a long time coming."

Researchers were waiting for the promised flood of data that would come as protons from two particle beams from the 17-mile-circumference collider smashed into each other.

Several experiments using the particle accelerator could help test for smaller particles, dark matter, other dimensions, supersymmetry and other theories in particle physics, researchers said.

"We're pretty happy because we've been waiting all night," said Andy Yen, 21, a senior who had worked on experiments related to the collider for most of his undergraduate career. "Some people have been waiting 15, 20 years – it's late, but it's worth it."

Earlier that night, two previous attempts to ramp up the accelerator had been cut short, and the researchers, who at peak attendance numbered two-dozen-plus, were running low on pizza and energy. The buzz of conversation between professors and doctoral candidates died down each time the two beams were spun in preparation for the planned collision.

Many said they had planned stay all night until the data began to flow in, even though they would not have immediate access to the measurements. Caltech particle physicist Bertrand Echenard said he was staying for the experience.

"When you watch the Olympic Games, you can watch the flame for 15 days, but what you want to watch is the [torch] lighting," Echenard said, standing below two clocks: one with "GENEVA" pasted over the glass, a second covered in "CAL TECH."

"It really is the start of something."

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times


http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-hadron-collider31-2010mar31,0,4393311.story
 
Re: Lhc Countdown!!!! Cern!! Hello!!! This Bitch Is Going Online In a matter of hours

03312010Morin.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg
 
Re: Large Hadron Collider rumoured to have found God Particle


Scientists Look to Quell 'God Particle' Excitement


Confirm leaked memo was genuine, but say it so far is only speculation


73457526.jpg.CROP.thumbnail-small.jpg



Slate
By Josh Voorhees
Tuesday, Apr. 26, 2011


It turns out that a recently leaked memo speculating that scientists are getting
closer to proving the existence of the so-called Higgs boson “God particle” wasn’t
a hoax after all.

But officials at the multi-billion-dollar particle accelerator (known as the Large
Hadron Collider) in Switzerland where the work is being done don’t want anyone
breaking out their best pocket protectors to celebrate just yet.

James Gillies, an official spokesman for the European lab, known as CERN, told
the Telegraph this week that while the internal memo making its rounds on the
Web is genuine, it’s only one of thousands that are being churned out by scientists
and that nothing has been confirmed.

“It is far too early to say if there is anything to it or not,” he told the paper. ”This
is an internal communication that highlights something interesting, but it has to go
through several stages of assessment by the scientific team before it will be
released as an official result by the collaborative team.”

And then, just in case anyone was getting excited about science for the first time
since Mr. Wizard went off the air, Gillies added: “The majority of these things turn
out to be nothing at all.”

As the paper explains: The still-elusive Higgs boson is a theoretical particle believed
to give everything in the universe mass. It is a key part of the standard model used
in physics to describe how particle and atoms are made up.

The leaked memo, written by four scientists working on the Large Hadron Collider,
reported that one of the particle detectors had caught a particle that could
potentially be a Higgs boson.

The internal memo was posted on the blog of Columbia University’s Peter Woit,
and quickly made the rounds on the Internet, thanks in part to a link on the Drudge
Report to an early news story on the item.




http://slatest.slate.com/posts/2011...memo_genuine_but_scientists_urge_caution.html
 
Re: Large Hadron Collider rumoured to have found God Particle


Scientists Look to Quell 'God Particle' Excitement


Confirm leaked memo was genuine, but say it so far is only speculation


73457526.jpg.CROP.thumbnail-small.jpg



Slate
By Josh Voorhees
Tuesday, Apr. 26, 2011


It turns out that a recently leaked memo speculating that scientists are getting
closer to proving the existence of the so-called Higgs boson “God particle” wasn’t
a hoax after all.

But officials at the multi-billion-dollar particle accelerator (known as the Large
Hadron Collider) in Switzerland where the work is being done don’t want anyone
breaking out their best pocket protectors to celebrate just yet.

James Gillies, an official spokesman for the European lab, known as CERN, told
the Telegraph this week that while the internal memo making its rounds on the
Web is genuine, it’s only one of thousands that are being churned out by scientists
and that nothing has been confirmed.

“It is far too early to say if there is anything to it or not,” he told the paper. ”This
is an internal communication that highlights something interesting, but it has to go
through several stages of assessment by the scientific team before it will be
released as an official result by the collaborative team.”

And then, just in case anyone was getting excited about science for the first time
since Mr. Wizard went off the air, Gillies added: “The majority of these things turn
out to be nothing at all.”

As the paper explains: The still-elusive Higgs boson is a theoretical particle believed
to give everything in the universe mass. It is a key part of the standard model used
in physics to describe how particle and atoms are made up.

The leaked memo, written by four scientists working on the Large Hadron Collider,
reported that one of the particle detectors had caught a particle that could
potentially be a Higgs boson.

The internal memo was posted on the blog of Columbia University’s Peter Woit,
and quickly made the rounds on the Internet, thanks in part to a link on the Drudge
Report to an early news story on the item.




http://slatest.slate.com/posts/2011...memo_genuine_but_scientists_urge_caution.html
 
Re: Large Hadron Collider rumoured to have found God Particle


Scientists Look to Quell 'God Particle' Excitement


Confirm leaked memo was genuine, but say it so far is only speculation


73457526.jpg.CROP.thumbnail-small.jpg



Slate
By Josh Voorhees
Tuesday, Apr. 26, 2011


It turns out that a recently leaked memo speculating that scientists are getting
closer to proving the existence of the so-called Higgs boson “God particle” wasn’t
a hoax after all.

But officials at the multi-billion-dollar particle accelerator (known as the Large
Hadron Collider) in Switzerland where the work is being done don’t want anyone
breaking out their best pocket protectors to celebrate just yet.

James Gillies, an official spokesman for the European lab, known as CERN, told
the Telegraph this week that while the internal memo making its rounds on the
Web is genuine, it’s only one of thousands that are being churned out by scientists
and that nothing has been confirmed.

“It is far too early to say if there is anything to it or not,” he told the paper. ”This
is an internal communication that highlights something interesting, but it has to go
through several stages of assessment by the scientific team before it will be
released as an official result by the collaborative team.”

And then, just in case anyone was getting excited about science for the first time
since Mr. Wizard went off the air, Gillies added: “The majority of these things turn
out to be nothing at all.”

As the paper explains: The still-elusive Higgs boson is a theoretical particle believed
to give everything in the universe mass. It is a key part of the standard model used
in physics to describe how particle and atoms are made up.

The leaked memo, written by four scientists working on the Large Hadron Collider,
reported that one of the particle detectors had caught a particle that could
potentially be a Higgs boson.

The internal memo was posted on the blog of Columbia University’s Peter Woit,
and quickly made the rounds on the Internet, thanks in part to a link on the Drudge
Report to an early news story on the item.




http://slatest.slate.com/posts/2011...memo_genuine_but_scientists_urge_caution.html

Thanks :cool:
 
Re: Large Hadron Collider rumoured to have found God Particle

<font size="5"><center>
Densest Matter Created in Big-Bang Machine</font size>
<font size="4">

"Besides black holes, there's nothing denser" we've seen, physicist says.</font size></center>



densest-matter-quark-gluon-plasma-created_35892_600x450.jpg

A picture of the LHC's ALICE detector, which helped observe the densest matter.
Photograph courtesy Mona Schweizer, CERN



Ker Than

for National Geographic News

Published May 24, 2011


A superhot substance recently made in the Large Hadron Collider (pictures) is the densest form of matter ever observed, scientists announced this week.

Known as a quark-gluon plasma, the primordial state of matter may be what the entire universe was like in the immediate aftermath of the big bang.

The exotic material is more than a hundred thousand times hotter than the inside of the sun and is denser than a neutron star, one of the densest known objects in the universe.

"Besides black holes, there's nothing denser than what we're creating," said David Evans, a physicist at the University of Birmingham in the U.K. and a team leader for the LHC's ALICE detector, which helped observe the quark-gluon plasma.

"If you had a cubic centimeter of this stuff, it would weigh 40 billion tons."


Densest Matter Acts Like Perfect Liquid

By triggering hundreds of thousands of high-speed collisions each second, physicists using the LHC hope to break subatomic particles into even more basic forms of matter, which can be used to study what the universe was like a trillionth of a second after the big bang.

LHC scientists made the quark-gluon plasma last year by smashing together lead ions—lead atoms that have been stripped of their electrons—at nearly the speed of light.

As the name suggests, quark-gluon plasma is made up of quarks and gluons. Quarks are the elementary building blocks of positively charged protons and neutral neutrons, which make up atomic cores. Gluons are particles that "glue" quarks together using the so-called strong force.

It's thought that, as the universe cooled, the quark-gluon plasma that existed after the big bang coalesced to form matter as we know it today. (Related: "Strange Particle Created; May Rewrite How Matter's Made.")

The quark-gluon plasma created at the LHC is about twice the amount and about twice as hot as quark-gluon plasma previously made using the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, New York.

Still, the plasmas created by the two machines are very similar, scientists said this week during the Quark Matter 2011 Conference in Annecy, France. For example, scientists have now confirmed that both versions behaved like so-called perfect liquids, with nearly zero friction.

"If you stir a cup of tea with a spoon and then take the spoon out, the tea stirs for a while and then it stops. If you had a perfect liquid and you stirred it, it would carry on going around forever," Evans explained.

Some theories predict that, in the extreme heat of the very early universe, quarks and gluons would have been even more widely spaced, creating a quark-gluon plasma that behaved like a gas. The ALICE team is therefore looking for evidence of gas-like behavior in the early stages of their quark-gluon plasma formation.

"There are slight differences between our measurement and RHIC's," Evans said.

"It could well be that in the very early stages [of our quark-gluon plasma], it's behaving more like a gas, and then as it cools it turns into a liquid, but we will need to investigate this further."


Highs and Lows of Making Matter

If this gas-to-liquid transition has indeed been observed, it would be surprising, since theory predicts that it should occur at much higher temperatures than those currently being produced at the LHC, said Thomas Ludlam, chair of the physics department at Brookhaven.

"I would regard the ALICE claim that they may be seeing hints of this as very interesting, but rather speculative at this stage," said Ludlam, who was not involved in the project.

The results are nevertheless very exciting, he added. "They show that the LHC"—which went online in 2009 after more than a year's delay due to mechanical problems—"is squarely in the game now."

Also, by comparing the lower energy quark-gluon plasma created at the RHIC with the higher energy version from the LHC, scientists could gain a better understanding of how and when the substance changed as the universe cooled, Ludlam said.

"I think we're now at a point where, with these two machines, we can look over a very wide energy range at the properties of the quark-gluon plasma as it evolves with temperature and density," Ludlam said.

With this goal in mind, he added, RHIC scientists have been trying for the past year to create a quark-gluon plasma at even lower energies, to find the temperature at which quarks and gluons come together to form protons and neutrons.

Meanwhile, the LHC is still operating at only half of its maximum energy, and the ALICE team expects to create even denser forms of quark-gluon plasma as the machine ramps up in the future.



http://news.nationalgeographic.com/...ter-created-lhc-alice-big-bang-space-science/
 
Re: Large Hadron Collider rumoured to have found God Particle

good read. hope these people have some air tight contingency plans if there is ever a malfunction.
 
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