Posts Tagged ‘LHC’

Quantum Leap: The $9-billion particle

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Guest author, Thomas Kennedy, features a twice-monthly series, Quantum Leap, wherein he guides readers through the fascinating world of quantum mechanics.  This is issue 005.

The significance of the $9 billion dollar particle …

In an earlier article, I talked about the Other Worldly difference between the near certainty, relatively speaking, of Newtonian physics and the chaotic, probability realm of quantum mechanics – how you can predict the path of a normal baseball being thrown against a wall bouncing back to you while a quantum baseball would just as likely go through the wall and come out the other side as it would return to you.

The fact that the Newtonian world we live in each day, looking so relatively stable, is actually resting on a world teeming with chaos and uncertainty – well, that makes this place we live in as much like Alice going down the rabbit hole as anything else.

Artist rendering of the Higgs Boson particle

It also leads us to the quest for the $9-billion particle, otherwise known as Higgs Boson.  The $9-billion cost is the budget used to create the Large Hadron Collider that will be used to attempt to find this little beastie.

Finding the Higgs Boson particle would, once and for all, unite the four forces that seemingly make up our world and usher in a New World Order with all sorts of possibilities for our understanding of the Universe, unifying the worlds of Newtonian physics and quantum mechanics.  The failure to find the particle wouldn’t make the Large Hadron Collider inert, but it would prove, once again, that speculation built on a hypothesis can easily lead the scientific community astray.

More to come on this one…

Watch for Issue #6 of Thomas’ “Quantum Leap”, here on A Sky Full of Stars, on January 15, 2010.

You can access all previous issues of “Quantum Leap”, here.

Quantum Leap: What the ?

Friday, November 6th, 2009

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Guest author, Thomas Kennedy, will feature a twice-monthly series, Quantum Leap, wherein he guides readers through the fascinating world of quantum mechanics.

What is the opposite of being a Theoretical Physicist?  How about someone outside of the military who developed what is commonly called A Dirty Bomb, back in the late 1970s?  While most of my college buddies at the University of the Pacific were working on designing the perfect beer bong, a fraternity brother and I designed a nuclear device the size of a beach ball that would catalyze reprocessed uranium from an old nuclear reactor facility and create an explosion such that it would spread radioactive particles across several miles.  Such was the result of a paper for a Special Topics course in Nuclear Terrorism 20 years ahead of it’s time.

With that work I backed into the world of Quantum Mechanics and the unique world that exists not based on certainty but probability.  It is akin to living your life inside a Las Vegas casino.  And yet, all of life that we see and experience each day, the nature of what we see as certain, shakes and shimmers and flies about in ways that are astounding.  Things we take for granted from the world of high school  physics, rules that we think are hard and fast, are beginning to be broken in ways we are only beginning to understand.

And with the start up of the Large Hadron Collider, the world of Quantum Mechanics is literally abuzz with possibilities. What better time to launch a blog on the subject of God (the God Particle), Creation, the nature of Space Time, and where to get a good hamburger …

Join me, here, on the 1st and 3rd Fridays of each month, for Quantum Leap.

Issue 001 – 2009Nov06:  What the ?

Consider, if you will, the possibility of living in an alternate universe, where action does not lead to reaction, where outcomes are determined by a toss of a coin, a statistical probability.  Imagine staying in bed all day and getting up to find $1 million dollars in your bank account.  Or working like a dog only to be paid $1.00.  (Well maybe in this economy that happens anyway.)

The literal world we live in, that we take for granted as being predictable, at the fundamental level , masks the craziness of the elements that make it up.  It is as if you had a jig saw puzzle whose pieces danced and blurred and spun in circles on your coffee table as you sought to try and assemble the picture on the cover of the box that you poured the contents out of.

The world of Quantum Mechanics appears at times to be unapproachable but that isn’t always the case, it just depends on how one approaches the subject.  My purpose here is to sort of lead a tour guide through the world of quantum mechanics and a way to think about the subject that can help to make sense of that world and what it means to our readers.

We’ll begin our tour with Issue #2.  Watch for it, here, on November 20.