---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 09 Mar 2010 14:36:36 +0100
From: Rolf Heuer <rolf.heuer@cern.ch>
To: "cern-personnel (CERN Personnel - Members and Associate Members)"
<cern-personnel@cern.ch>
Subject: On the threshold of new territory - Aux portes d'un nouveau territoire
On the threshold of new territory
The LHC is already over a week into its 2010 run, and the start of physics at 7 TeV is just around the corner. Last week, participants at the annual La Thuile workshop in Italy had the chance to take stock of what lies in store for the LHC's first physics run. They learned that there's a great sense of anticipation here at CERN and at particle physics labs around the globe, and for good reason - we're about to open up the biggest range of potential new discovery that particle physics has seen in over a decade.
Our objective over the next 18 to 24 months is to deliver one inverse femtobarn of data to the experiments. In other words, enough data to make significant advances across a wide range of physics channels.
Take supersymmetry. ATLAS and CMS will each have enough data to significantly extend today's sensitivity to new discoveries. Experiments today are sensitive to some supersymmetric particles with masses up to about 400 GeV. An inverse femtobarn at the LHC pushes that up to about 800 GeV. This means that in the next two years, the experiments at the LHC will explore as much territory in their quest for SUSY as has been covered in the history of particle physics to date. In other words, the LHC has a real chance over the next two years of discovering supersymmetric particles, possibly elucidating the nature of the dark matter that accounts for about a quarter of the mass and energy of the Universe.
The Higgs particle is another example. The last word that CERN had to say on the matter came from LEP almost ten years ago. In the last year of LEP running there were tantalising signs that the Higgs might have made an appearance but all we could say for sure was that the Higgs must have a mass above about 115 GeV. Since then, the Tevatron has done great work towards ruling out some of the mass range that the Higgs could inhabit. With an inverse femtobarn of data from the LHC, the combined analyses of ATLAS and CMS will be able to explore a wide mass range, and there's even a chance of discovery if the particle has a mass near 160 GeV.
At the more exotic end of the potential discovery spectrum, LHC experiments will be sensitive to new massive particles that could herald the presence of extra dimensions. Discoveries up to masses of 2 TeV will be possible, whereas today's reach is around 1 TeV.
All this makes now a very good time to be a particle physicist, and in particular a student of particle physics. Some 2500 graduate students are eagerly awaiting data from all the LHC experiments, ALICE, ATLAS, CMS, LHCb, LHCf and TOTEM. They're a privileged group, set to produce the first PhD theses at the new high-energy frontier.
Two years of continuous running is a tall order both for the LHC operators and the experiments, but it will be well worth the effort. By abandoning CERN's traditional annual operational cycle we're increasing the overall running time and discovery potential over the next three years. This run will be followed by preparations for 14 TeV collisions in a single shutdown and another major advance into new territory as great as the one we are on the threshold of achieving.
Rolf Heuer
On the threshold of new territory
- CharmQuark
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Re: On the threshold of new territory
Exciting times ahead really can't wait
Anyone who doesn't take truth seriously in small matters cannot be trusted with large ones either by Albert Einstein.
Re: On the threshold of new territory
It looks like there will be a delay in reaching 14TeV The LHC is to be shut down for a year after 2011 to address safety concerns http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8556621.stm
- chriwi
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Re: On the threshold of new territory
I found this old Interview with Stephen Hawking comenting on the LHC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7608465.stm
bye
chriwi
chriwi
14 TeV delay: old news
The 14 TeV delay was news five weeks ago:
http://ow.ly/1grwX
It amazes me how slow the newspapers can be, sometimes.
http://ow.ly/1grwX
It amazes me how slow the newspapers can be, sometimes.
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Re: On the threshold of new territory
want slow? check out the bbc:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8556621.stm
guess they wanna keep it in the news help boost figures i guess.
Interesting bit of info they changed the headline last night, it was labled "LHC to shut down 2011 to address safety concerns"
as if its refering to the anti LHC crew
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8556621.stm
guess they wanna keep it in the news help boost figures i guess.
Interesting bit of info they changed the headline last night, it was labled "LHC to shut down 2011 to address safety concerns"
as if its refering to the anti LHC crew
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Re: On the threshold of new territory
What is also interesting is how this has not been in the news for weeks, and now that one source publishes it, suddenly it's all over the Interwebz (Dutch-language Google News was full of links about it a few days ago). Makes you wonder how many newspapers actually do their job (news gathering) and how many just copy the stories they found on the websites of other newspapers.
(Just in case: I am aware of newspapers syndicates, but that's not what I am referring to.)
(Just in case: I am aware of newspapers syndicates, but that's not what I am referring to.)
Nothing travels faster than the speed of light with the possible exception of bad news, which obeys its own special laws.
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~Douglas Adams