Recently in LHC Category

I was supposed to liveblogging this from the Science and Technology Facilities Council's "Big Bang Breakfast" event, but we had a bit of a technical failure. (Mildly ironic given that CERN famously invented the web.)

Luckily, CERN had no such problems.

The proton beams were oscillating too much at first, but were quickly brought under control as the tests went through more and more of the Large Hadron Collider's sections and finally right round the whole ring.

The LHCb detector first picked up some particle tracks around 9.30am UK time. This is what the first collisions detected in by the ATLAS (left) and CMS looked like:

 

cmsandatlas.jpg
cmsandatlas.jpg

 

 

denham.jpg
denham.jpg

Before these results came in, John Denham, the Secretary of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills, reiterated the need for fundamental research such as this. He emphasised his point with a story of the first approval of UK involvement in expensive particle physics research, under Margaret Thatcher. Expecting her to be opposed to the idea, her ministers had carefully rehearsed arguments against involvement in a big, publicly funded, European project with little in the way of expected benefits. She allegedly replied: "Yes, but it is interesting."

 

 I'm sure the pupils from Langton Grammar School would agree with Mrs Thatcher. They were lucky enough to have previously visited CERN, and made an appearance at the STFC's switch-on event to share their new-found enthusiasm -- one girl has even decided to study physics at University rather than business as planned. It's certainly a refreshing antidote to the widespread comments on newspaper websites from somewhat hysterical Key Stage 3 and 4 kids panicking about the end of world -- partly attributable, I would imagine, to a lack of specialist physics teachers.

 

school.jpg
school.jpg

 

 

ISIS Second Target Station
ISIS Second Target Station

Occasionally there are significant scientific breakthroughs that general punters hear very little of. This week there was a breakthrough that the newspapers and news broadcasters barely touched, yet it was a major milestone for research across a range of crucial research areas, such as clean energy and the environment, pharmaceuticals and health care through to nanotechnology, materials engineering and IT.

I’m referring to the creation of the first neutrons in the ISIS Second Target Station, something which has taken five years in construction and planning and prepares the facility to make discoveries that affect almost every aspect of our lives. 
 
There are understandable, but not admirable, reasons as to why big developments like this don’t make the news. The science is often perceived to be either too hard or too prosaic for the general reader. The first excuse is patronising, the second is just wrong. 
 
Opinion formers are waking up though, witness the Large Hadron Collider which, it has been announced this week, will be activated on 10 September.  CERN’s PR team has done a brilliant job of raising the profile of this unprecedentedly important physics experiment. Whether it’s through pub banter about black holes or serious debate about addressing environmental concerns, physics is crucial and developments like ISIS should be more worthy of newspapers’ column inches.

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