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Originally posted by Arrowmancer
Hadron.
For those of you new to this one, Hadron, AKA: Large Hadron Collider or LHC
Hadron wasn't the first superconductor
Sort of. Texas had a supercollider commissioned that was 54 miles in circumference.
Desertron wanted to produce 40 TeV of collision energy. Hadron wanted 14.
Most of these proton-whackers are CERN projects.
Then, of course, you have the Super Large Hadron Collider , which is basically an upgraded LHC. You'd think these people could invest some money into a decent website. The simplicity and lack of Java is appalling.
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Hadron is a word reserved for a class of strong-interacting subatomic particles. Don't mess with terminology.
Originally posted by strangequark
Originally posted by buddhasystem
Hadron is a word reserved for a class of strong-interacting subatomic particles. Don't mess with terminology.
More accurately a Hadron (from the Greek "hadros" meaning "thick") is a composite particle made up of quarks and can be broken down. For comparison a Lepton (from the Greek "leptos" meaning "fine"), such as an electron, is a fundemental particle in itself and, as far as we can see, cannot be broken down any further.
Since I'm not new to the topic of LHC, let me note that your statement is nonsense. It's the same as saying that:
Gasoline, AKA Car.
Superconductor is the word reserved for a class of materials that exhibit no electrical resistance to the passing current. Your statement reads same as "cheddar cheese was not the first rat".
Commissioning when applied to scientific instruments is a word reserved for commencement of operation. As such, the SSC was never actually commissioned and its construction was never finished.
Particle accelerators don't have free will or intelligence hence can't "want" anything.
Really? Until recently the most powerful machine was the Tevatron at FNAL.
If you want flashy graphics, check out NickJr.com or other such site. Who needs Java to list a set of basic documents, for God's sake? On second thought, if you want to help with money for Web development, send a check to Atlas.
Is there nothing to worry about a artificial machine that produces more electromagnetisim then the planet it is located on??? Um Just Sayen
What about the creation of stable di-baryons? Are we entering a grey area when the LHC is ramped up to full power? We certainly don't know all there is to know about quarks and quantum theory. There may well be an esoteric side to this stuff, but few Scientists think about it on that level. I don't think we're in any real danger, but you never know, you know.
Originally posted by deadred
What about the creation of stable di-baryons?
Originally posted by deadred
What about the creation of stable di-baryons?
Originally posted by buddhasystem
They are called deuterons
Originally posted by Ophiuchus 13
reply to post by Arrowmancer
I personally found this alarming... The LHC is a machine of extreme hot and cold. When two beams of protons collide, they will generate temperatures more than 100 000 times hotter than the heart of the Sun, concentrated within a minuscule space. By contrast, the 'cryogenic distribution system', which circulates superfluid helium around the accelerator ring, keeps the LHC at a super cool temperature of -271.3°C (1.9 K) – even colder than outer space!
LHC Magnetic field 8.33 Tesla
Earth field is 0.00005 Tesla
Is there nothing to worry about a artificial machine that produces more electromagnetisim then the planet it is located on??? Um Just Sayen
edit on 11/16/10 by Ophiuchus 13 because: (no reason given)