Longest Accelerator Probes Universe’s Tiniest Particles
My friend Dave did this latest piece for Wired.com…which i find quite interesting!
MENLO PARK, California — Wired.com recently toured the longest linear accelerator in the world, which resides beneath nondescript gray buildings here at Stanford University.
Scientists at the Stanford Linear Accelerator, or SLAC, labs have won three Nobel prizes and are currently amassing the first scientific evidence that there is more matter than antimatter in the universe, by smashing positrons and electrons together.
The lab’s next big project, the Linac Coherent Light Source, will go online next year. Its X-ray free electron laser will be roughly 10 billion times more powerful than existing X-ray sources and let researchers capture movies of atoms and molecules during chemical reactions.
Left (below): This 4,000-ton monster of an instrument sits at the intersection of two curved magnetic-beam paths, where it detects and measures elementary particles that are released when positrons slam in to electrons.
The Large Detector can measure every particle produced by this collision — except neutrinos, which can only be detected when they remove enough energy from the reaction that the scientists know something is missing.
Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com
To view the full slideshow click here.
![]()
-
![]()
–
![]()
–
![]()
–
![]()
via Wired
1 comment1 Comment so far
Leave a reply
is this dave from La Habra E ? Would have never figured he writes for WIRED!!! Illa-skrilla homey…