What's the Latest Music Video from the LHC?

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    Lhc
In summary: I read that 1 GZ = 1 joule.So that makes it 1 x 10^9 joules.Regards, HansIn summary, the conversation revolved around the excitement and anticipation of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and its potential to achieve high energy ranges. Some were disappointed with the lack of immediate results, while others celebrated the achievements and popularity of particle physics. Some even joked about the possibility of the LHC causing destruction, but others pointed out that the energy produced by the LHC is minuscule compared to that of cosmic rays. The conversation also included a discussion on a legal brief analyzing the potential risks of the LHC. Overall, the conversation showcased the wonder and curiosity surrounding the L
  • #1
Vanadium 50
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What the title says...
 
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  • #2
when can we expect to see a higgs(in terms of energy ranges)?
 
  • #3
30 minutes and no black hole yet? I feel cheated.
 
  • #5
It's been really exciting, though the webcast was crappy
 
  • #6
Borek said:
30 minutes and no black hole yet? I feel cheated.

"And boom goes the dynamite" :rofl:


All kidding aside, this is fantastic! This is even on the front page of CNN... particle physics as popular culture. We live in a strange and wonderful age, even if it can be a pain in the ***. Go LHC!

EDIT: Heh, they're having a bit of a drink in the CMS control room. I see a lot of smiles, so I'd say life is good in Geneva!
 
  • #7
Honestly, those guys and gals at the LHC are drinking in almost every photo I see of them!

I had 50 new text messages from CMS, CERN, ATLAS, ALICE, LHCb, LHCf, and USLHC all talking about the new energies. I need to unsubscribe from a couple of those!
 
  • #8
0MG!1 Is the LHC on for realz!?
 
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  • #10
Press conference about to start:

http://webcast.cern.ch/lhcfirstphysics/

Regards, Hans
 
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  • #11
  • #13
Evo said:
That was great.

It might ruin the aesthetic, but I can't help but think that site could turn a profit with some advertising all around the "NO", if you published the link in the right places. Tell people to check often! :rofl:
 
  • #14
:D

no Angels or Demons yet?

:P
 
  • #15
Frame Dragger said:
site could turn a profit with some advertising

Tin foil hats?

Actually site has quite a lot of traffic (see alexa.com) - I am surprised.
 
  • #16
Borek said:
Tin foil hats?

Actually site has quite a lot of traffic (see alexa.com) - I am surprised.

Oh yes, we could do a BRISK business in tin foil! Hell, trust us, it's PF BRAND foil! For the lazy paranoid we could have pre-made caps, or for the deluded soul who still wants to be fashionable, tinfoil lining tastefully tucked away in a 10-gallaon cowboy hat. :rofl:

As for the traffic... I wish I could say I'm surprised, but I spend too much time with people to even hope anymore. :cry:
 
  • #17
Long, but very good legal brief by UT law professor up on arxiv:

[THE BLACK HOLE CASE: THE INJUNCTION AGAINST THE END OF THE WORLD
http://arxiv.org/pdf/0912.5480

There have been some reputable scientists along the way claiming the case against LHC black holes was not full proof; their story and the story of the LHC responders is discussed, followed by in interesting discussion of how the legal system might approach the argument and assess risk.
 
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  • #18
mheslep said:
Long, but very good legal brief by UT law professor up on arxiv:

[THE BLACK HOLE CASE: THE INJUNCTION AGAINST THE END OF THE WORLD
http://arxiv.org/pdf/0912.5480

There have been some reputable scientists along the way claiming the case against LHC black holes was not full proof; their story and the story of the LHC responders is discussed, followed by in interesting discussion of how the legal system might approach the argument and assess risk.

I have good friend who is an electrical engineer-turned-lawyer (ghastly, I know, lovely guy though) who is going to eat this up with a spoon. Hell, I'm liking it myself. Thanks mheslep!
 
  • #19
mheslep said:
Long, but very good legal brief by UT law professor up on arxiv:

[THE BLACK HOLE CASE: THE INJUNCTION AGAINST THE END OF THE WORLD
http://arxiv.org/pdf/0912.5480

There have been some reputable scientists along the way claiming the case against LHC black holes was not full proof; their story and the story of the LHC responders is discussed, followed by in interesting discussion of how the legal system might approach the argument and assess risk.
Hey it was only a joke:blushing: Don't forget that how impressive LHC may be for human
standards and how high it's scientific value could be. The energies it produces
are absolutely minute to what occasionally happens above our heads in the
atmosphere.

10 4 eV: Your old television's Cathode Ray Tube
1012 eV: Large Hadron Collider
1020 eV: Highest Energy Cosmic Rays in our atmosphere.

The energy ratio between the electrons in the TV in your living room and the LHC is
the same as the ratio between the LHC energies and those of the cosmic rays hitting
our atmosphere.Regards, Hans
 
  • #20
Hans de Vries said:
Hey it was only a joke:blushing: Don't forget that how impressive LHC may be for human
standards and how high it's scientific value could be. The energies it produces
are absolutely minute to what occasionally happens above our heads in the
atmosphere.

10 4 eV: Your old television's Cathode Ray Tube
1012 eV: Large Hadron Collider
1020 eV: Highest Energy Cosmic Rays in our atmosphere.

The energy ratio between the electrons in the TV in your living room and the LHC is
the same as the ratio between the LHC energies and those of the cosmic rays hitting
our atmosphere.


Regards, Hans

...Cosmic rays with single particles with the mass of bloody baseballs sometimes! :laugh: I feel badly for people who suffer over knowledge of the LHC... it's such an achievement for our lifetimes, and it will scratch the itch of curiosity that has driven us before we were homos sapiens sapiens. I call that a net win. :smile:

The joke is priceless though... really. They could have put "You're reading this, right jack***?!" but they went with "NO". Minimalist. Genius! :rofl:
 
  • #21
Hans de Vries said:
Hey it was only a joke:blushing: Don't forget that how impressive LHC may be for human
standards and how high it's scientific value could be. The energies it produces
are absolutely minute to what occasionally happens above our heads in the
atmosphere.

10 4 eV: Your old television's Cathode Ray Tube
1012 eV: Large Hadron Collider
1020 eV: Highest Energy Cosmic Rays in our atmosphere.

The energy ratio between the electrons in the TV in your living room and the LHC is
the same as the ratio between the LHC energies and those of the cosmic rays hitting
our atmosphere.
Yes I thought 50 joules was the highest CR ever recorded. That was indeed the first argument used by the folks in the LHC camp - that if it were possible to create some catastrophic event at the LHC higher energy CRs would have done it already. As you'll see if you dig deeper, the existence of CR's by themselves do not foreclose all possibilities of catastrophe:

http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0106219" , 65 PHYSICAL REV. D 056010, at 1 (2002)

Black Holes at the Large Hadron Collider
Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 161602 (2001
http://prl.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v87/i16/e161602

The most recent and formidable paper from Max Planck Institute Astrophysicist Rainer Plaga:
Rainer Plaga, On the Potential Catastrophic Risk from Metastable Quantum-black
Holes Produced at Particle Colliders
, ARXIV:GEN-PH/0808.1415v2 (Sept. 26, 2008), available
at http://arxiv.org/abs/0808.1415v2

So the complaints were no joke, though as far as I can tell, and I can't tell very well, these propositions have all been shot down by published responses.
 
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  • #22
For some added amusement, take a peek at that page's source code.

--diogenesNY


Borek said:
Thanks, I forgot about the site but just looking makes me really feel better :wink:

Hans de Vries said:
Live Coverage: Has the LHC destroyed the Earth yet?

http://www.hasthelhcdestroyedtheearth.com/

Regards, Hans.
 
  • #23
diogenesNY said:
For some added amusement, take a peek at that page's source code.

--diogenesNY

:rofl: That's fantastic! What a classic move.
 
  • #24
If you would like to spend a couple of hours banging your head on your keyboard, here is the link from several thousand people who commented on this story at Yahoo:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100319/ap_on_sc/eu_big_bang_machine#mwpphu-container
 
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  • #25
Hans de Vries said:
Hey it was only a joke:blushing: Don't forget that how impressive LHC may be for human
standards and how high it's scientific value could be. The energies it produces
are absolutely minute to what occasionally happens above our heads in the
atmosphere.

10 4 eV: Your old television's Cathode Ray Tube
1012 eV: Large Hadron Collider
1020 eV: Highest Energy Cosmic Rays in our atmosphere.

The energy ratio between the electrons in the TV in your living room and the LHC is
the same as the ratio between the LHC energies and those of the cosmic rays hitting
our atmosphere.


Regards, Hans

The CoM energy available to create new particles when a 10^20 eV proton collides with another proton at rest is only about

sqrt[2*10^(20)*10^9] eV = 4.5*10^14 eV
 
  • #26
  • #27
diogenesNY said:
A fairly good Q&A FAQ type article on the LHC from the Sunday New York Times 'Week in Review' section:

Perhaps useful for passing around to people wondering what the fuss is about.


Title: 'A Primer on the Great Proton Smashup'

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/04/weekinreview/04overbye.html

diogenesNY

Thanks
 
  • #28
What software are they using to do the data analysis of the results?
 
  • #29
Observables said:
What software are they using to do the data analysis of the results?

It must be proprietary and customized given the application... and the amount of data. That said, I think we have a mentor here who works there...

Anyway, welcome to PF Observables. :smike:
 
  • #30
observables said:
what software are they using to do the data analysis of the results?

root
 
  • #31
Hans de Vries said:
Live Coverage: Has the LHC destroyed the Earth yet?

http://www.hasthelhcdestroyedtheearth.com/

Regards, Hans.

I took a closer look at the NO with an STM
The attached image shows the enlargement.
 

Attachments

  • NO.bmp
    66.6 KB · Views: 623
  • #32
I just found this site "http://www.cyriak.co.uk/lhc/lhc-webcams.html" " and thought I would share it.
 
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  • #33
That was a good one!
 
  • #34
A new LHC music video...hmm...what do you think?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WShZVxPZETw
 
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1. What is the LHC?

The LHC, or Large Hadron Collider, is the world's largest and most powerful particle accelerator. It is located at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, in Switzerland.

2. Why is the LHC important for music videos?

The LHC is not directly related to music videos. However, it is used by artists and musicians as a source of inspiration and a way to explore the intersection of science and art.

3. How does the LHC create music videos?

The LHC does not create music videos. However, artists and musicians can use data, images, and concepts from the LHC to create music videos that showcase the beauty and complexity of particle physics.

4. What is the latest music video from the LHC?

The latest music video from the LHC is constantly changing, as new artists and musicians continue to be inspired by the LHC. However, some popular music videos that have been created using LHC data include "Symmetry" by CERN physicist James Beacham and "Particle Man" by They Might Be Giants.

5. How can I watch the latest music video from the LHC?

You can watch the latest music video from the LHC by searching for it on YouTube or other video streaming platforms. You can also follow CERN or other organizations on social media to stay updated on new music videos inspired by the LHC.

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