Back to the Big Bang: Inside the Large Hadron Collider
Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 4 Μαρ 2015
Venture
deep inside the world’s biggest physics machine, the Large Hadron
Collider. This extraordinary feat of human engineering took 16 years and
$10 billion to build, and recently began colliding particles at
energies unseen since a fraction of a second after the big bang. We'll
explore this amazing apparatus that could soon reveal clues about
nature’s fundamental laws and even the origin of the universe itself.
John Hockenberry moderates a discussion among physicists including
Marcela Carena, Monica Dunford, Jennifer Klay, and Nobel laureate Frank
Wilczek.
Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for all the latest from WSF.
Visit our Website: http://www.worldsciencefestival.com/
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Participants: Frank Wilczek, Jennifer Klay, Marcela Carena, Monica Dunford
Original Program Date: June 5, 2010
John Hockenberry Introduction 00:14
What is the LHC? 04:57
Participant Introductions. 08:30
Where are we now with the LHC? 11:58
By smashing particles this creates a mini big bang? 16:58
What can the LHC do beyond Fermilab 21:30
How do you calculate the probability's that these particles are going to occur? 25:52
If you can create this mini big bang the energy changes are observable? 32:00
The search for the Higgs. 38:30
The standard model, Cosmological molasses, and Higgs. 44:25
How will you detect and confirm all of the predictions. 52:51
Departing form experimental evidence with super symmetry. 01:00:08
Are there places in space that have these particles? 01:07:07
Is there a limit to the number of particles you can expect? 01:13:50
Is there a possibility that the cosmological molasses is just a crutch? 01:22:16
The life of a LHC physicist. 01:26:49
deep inside the world’s biggest physics machine, the Large Hadron
Collider. This extraordinary feat of human engineering took 16 years and
$10 billion to build, and recently began colliding particles at
energies unseen since a fraction of a second after the big bang. We'll
explore this amazing apparatus that could soon reveal clues about
nature’s fundamental laws and even the origin of the universe itself.
John Hockenberry moderates a discussion among physicists including
Marcela Carena, Monica Dunford, Jennifer Klay, and Nobel laureate Frank
Wilczek.
Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for all the latest from WSF.
Visit our Website: http://www.worldsciencefestival.com/
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/worldscience...
Follow us on twitter: https://twitter.com/WorldSciFest
Participants: Frank Wilczek, Jennifer Klay, Marcela Carena, Monica Dunford
Original Program Date: June 5, 2010
John Hockenberry Introduction 00:14
What is the LHC? 04:57
Participant Introductions. 08:30
Where are we now with the LHC? 11:58
By smashing particles this creates a mini big bang? 16:58
What can the LHC do beyond Fermilab 21:30
How do you calculate the probability's that these particles are going to occur? 25:52
If you can create this mini big bang the energy changes are observable? 32:00
The search for the Higgs. 38:30
The standard model, Cosmological molasses, and Higgs. 44:25
How will you detect and confirm all of the predictions. 52:51
Departing form experimental evidence with super symmetry. 01:00:08
Are there places in space that have these particles? 01:07:07
Is there a limit to the number of particles you can expect? 01:13:50
Is there a possibility that the cosmological molasses is just a crutch? 01:22:16
The life of a LHC physicist. 01:26:49
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