That's a little misleading; outer space is actually about 100,000°C(not that ambient temperature has that much meaning in space)
That's a quote of the LHC website..
So I might die because a bunch of those geeks want to find some little bits of air.....time to start bashing some heads in![]()
So I might die because a bunch of those geeks want to find some little bits of air.....time to start bashing some heads in![]()
only physicist can justify spending millions on a machine to fine a particle![]()
i'm personally looking forward to when the LHC is fully operational, that is if it doesnt kill us all.![]()
New Scientist said:The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, illustrates just how daunting the problem can be. In May, it is due to begin smashing high-energy protons together in a bid, among other things, to discover the elusive Higgs boson, a particle thought to be responsible for endowing matter with mass. Sensors in the 27-kilometre circumference machine are expected to generate 450 million gigabytes of data over its 15-year lifetime, enough to fill 640 million CDs. The raw data will be stored on discs and tapes and converted into a more accessible format which can be made available to researchers via a grid of 100,000 computers around the world. Despite the magnitude of the project, CERN has no idea if it will have the cash or technical resources to preserve these data sets after the particle smasher has fired its last proton beam in 2023.
Energize, are you working at CERN? If so, is there any chance of some hi-res photos of the installation? The closest I've ever got is flying over at 2500' in a Bell.
God no I'm still in 6th form.
It's all on wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_Hadron_Collider
I think its actually closer to £4bn over its lifetime.