[has the universe ended yet?]

Collider probing mysteries of the universe at the speed of light
Worldwide computer grid helps scientists make sense of data coming
from collider experiments

By Sharon Gaudin

September 9, 2008 (Computerworld) With the world's biggest physics
experiment ready to fire up tomorrow, scientists from around the world
are hoping to find answers to a question that has haunted mankind for
centuries: How was the universe created?

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which has been under construction for
20 years, will shoot its first beam of protons around a 17-mile,
vacuum-sealed loop at a facility that sits astride the Franco-Swiss
border. The test run of what is the largest, most powerful particle
accelerator in the world, is a forebear to the coming time when
scientists will accelerate two particle beams toward each other at
99.9% of the speed of light.

Smashing the beams together will create showers of new particles that
should re-create conditions in the universe just moments after its
conception.

Tomorrow's test run is a critical milestone in getting to that
ultimate undertaking. And a worldwide grid of servers and desktops
will help the scientific team make sense of the information that they
expect will come pouring in.

"This will move the limit of our understanding of the universe," said
Ruth Pordes, executive director of the Open Science Grid, which was
created in 2005 to support the LHC project. "I'm very excited about
the turning on of the accelerator. Over the next two years, our grids
will be used by thousands of physicists at LHC to make new scientific
discoveries. That's what it's all for." ...

The computer infrastructure is critical to the work being done in the
particle collider, which is a tunnel buried 50 meters to 150 meters
below the ground. The tunnel, or tube, is designed to facilitate and
control a head-on collision between two beams of the same kind of
particles -- either protons or ions. Traveling through a vacuum
comparable to outer space, the beams are guided around the tube by
superconducting magnets.

According to documents from CERN, as the European Organization for
Nuclear Research is known, each of the two beams will contain about
3,000 bunches of particles. Each bunch will hold as many as 100
billion particles. Despite these huge numbers, the particles are so
tiny that a collision between any two is quite small. However, since
the beams will be traveling at near light speed around the 17-mile
tube, they'll cross each other about 30 million times per second,
resulting in an estimated 600 million collisions.

If a beam circulates around the tunnel for 10 hours, for instance, it
will travel more than 10 billion kilometers, which is the distance it
would take to travel to Neptune and back.

With the Big Bang theory, scientists largely believe that more than 13
billion years ago an amazingly dense object the size of maybe a coin
expanded into the universe that we know now -- with planets, stars,
black holes and life.

Bolek Wyslouch, a professor of physics at MIT who has been working on
the collider project for the last seven years, said that a main goal
of the experiments is to find the elusive Higgs particle that is
believed to be responsible for giving other particles their mass.
Though its existence hasn't been proven yet, it's believed that Higgs
particles are what give electrons their weight, for instance.

Scientists are also hoping the particle collider will give them
information about dark energy and dark matter.

"This is part of the quest to explore our surroundings. It's part of
the quest to understand our world and ourselves," said Wyslouch. "We
are trying to describe the basic elements of the matter surrounding us
-- to understand the basic infrastructure of how things work. The
knowledge of this microscopic world can be translated into knowledge
of the whole universe -- how it was formed, where all the matter is
coming from."

As the time for tomorrow's experiment has neared, rumors have
increasingly circulated around the Internet that the experiments might
destroy the universe [?? not just the Earth?] by accidentally creating
a black hole that would suck everything and everyone into it.

CERN released a report late last week saying that safety fears about
the LHC are "unfounded." CERN Director General Robert Aymar was quoted
as saying that any suggestion that there's a risk is "pure fiction."
[what's he going to say after it happens?]

whole article available at:
http://computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9114373
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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