2011年5月25日星期三

“每秒碰撞一億次“ - CERN的大型強子對撞機粉碎更近宇宙秘密的解開

“每秒碰撞一億次“ - CERN的大型強子對撞機粉碎更近宇宙秘密的解開
"100 Million Collisions per Second" -- CERN's Large Hadron Collider Smashes Closer to Unlocking Secrets of the Universe
May 24, 2011
The Daily Galaxy
Translation by Autumnson Blog
European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) scientists look at computer screens showing traces on the Atlas experiment of the first protons injected in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) during its switch-on operation in 2008 near Geneva. It set a new record early Monday, a feat that should accelerate the quest to pinpoint the elusive particle known as the Higgs Boson. CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is housed in a 27-kilometre (16.9-mile) ring-shaped tunnel 100 metres (325 feet) below ground, straddling the French-Swiss border.
歐洲核研究組織(CERN)的科學家們在看著電腦屏幕顯示ATLAS實驗,在其2008年於日內瓦附近的開掣行動時,將第一顆質子注入大型強子對撞機(LHC)的痕跡。它星期一早上創下一個新的記錄,一項壯舉應會加快尋求查明難以捉摸被稱為希格斯玻色子的粒子。 CERN的大型強子對撞機(LHC)是裝置在一間地下100米(325英尺)的 27公里(16.9英里)環形隧道,橫跨法國和瑞士邊境。
"Last night, a symbolic frontier was crossed," said Michel Spiro, president of the board of the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN), explaining that the rate of sub-atomic smashups in its vast machine had multiplied 10-fold in the space of a month.
“昨晚,一項象徵性的新領域被跨過,“歐洲核研究組織(CERN)的理事會主席米歇爾斯皮羅解釋,在它的巨大機器亞原子毀滅的速率在一個月的空間已乘以10倍。
The LHC is designed to accelerate beams of protons to nearly the speed of light in contra-rotating directions. Using huge magnets, the beams are then directed into labs where some of the protons collide while others escape. Detectors record the seething sub-atomic debris, hoping to find traces of particles that can strengthen fundamental understanding of physics.

"This is now 100 million collisions per second," Spiro said at a conference in Paris on the "infinitely small and the infinitely big."

Among the puzzles that physicists are seeking to answer is the existence of the Higgs, which has been dubbed "the God particle" for being mysterious yet ubiquitous. Its existence would explain the nature of mass, filling a major piece of the theoretical construct of physics known as the Standard Model. In London last week, CERN physicists said they believed that by the end of 2012 they could determine once and for all whether the Higgs existed or not.

Spiro said that this search would certainly be helped by the stepped-up pace of collision, which is the equivalent to sifting more earth in search of nuggets of gold.

"If we're lucky, and it (the Higgs) is in the right zone for expected mass, we may be able to find it this summer," he said. "On the other hand, ruling it out will take us to the end of next year." To provide a confirmation would require notching up "at least 15" detections, he said.


http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2011/05/100-million-collisions-per-second-large-hadron-collider-smashes-another-record.html

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