Teams at the Large Hadron Collider must be developing a knack for producing tangible evidence of theoretical particles.
After orchestrating 2 million collisions between lead nuclei and
protons, like the sort you see above, the collider's Compact Muon
Solenoid group and researchers at MIT
suspect that stray, linked pairs of gluon particles in the mix were
signs of color-glass condensate, a currently theory-only form of matter
that sees gluons travel in liquid-like, quantum-entangled waves. The
clues aren't definitive, but they were also caught unexpectedly as part
of a more routine collision run; the team is curious enough that it's
looking for more evidence during weeks of similar tests in January. Any
conclusive proof of the condensate would have an impact both on how we
understand particle production in collisions as well as the ways gluons
and quarks are arranged inside protons. If so, the CMS and MIT teams may
well answer a raft of questions about subatomic physics while further justifying CERN's giant underground rings.


Thursday, November 29, 2012
Kids96

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