• China unveils ambitious space-exploration plan

    Updated: 2011-12-30 22:56:00
    New York Times: The Chinese government has announced a five-year space-exploration plan that calls for launching a space laboratory and collecting samples from the Moon, all by 2016, along with a powerful manned spaceship and space freighters. The plan includes a major expansion of the Beidou Navigation Satellite System, which on Tuesday began providing navigation, positioning, and timing data on China and surrounding areas. China intends to expand Beidou from its current 10 satellites to 35 satellites in orbit by 2020.

  • Why tornadoes take the weekends off in summer

    Updated: 2011-12-30 22:54:18
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Criminal charges brought after researcher dies News Picks home China unveils ambitious space-exploration plan Why tornadoes take the weekends off in summer By Physics Today on December 30, 2011 5:54 PM No Comments No TrackBacks National Geographic An analysis of summertime storm activity in the eastern US from 1995 to 2009 revealed that the occurrence of tornadoes and hailstorms peaked in the middle of the week , when human-made summertime air pollution also peaked . Pollution can help breed storms because moisture gathers around specks of pollutants , which leads to more cloud droplets , which get lofted to higher , colder air , where

  • 2011: A Banner Year for Hype

    Updated: 2011-12-30 19:14:13
    Since every blogger seems to feel it necessary to have a year-in-review posting, I thought it appropriate to point out that 2011 has been a banner year for string theory and related hype, with about twice as many editions of … Continue reading →

  • Focus: Carbon Dating with Lasers

    Updated: 2011-12-30 15:00:00
    Infrared spectroscopy can detect trace gases and potentially provide an alternative carbon dating technique. Published Fri Dec 30, 2011

  • Academic honesty

    Updated: 2011-12-30 06:13:00
    Which string theorist can honestly say that string theory is correct? Or that supersymmetry is correct?Most universities require from their students "honesty in the search for truth". But universities are tricky beasts: they rarely apply to themselves what they require from others. If they did, university researchers and professors working on string theory would need to resign. Why don't they? Because of the money. These researchers do not pursue truth. They pursue money.

  • Criminal charges brought after researcher dies

    Updated: 2011-12-29 22:06:57
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Voyager 1 races toward interstellar space News Picks home Criminal charges brought after researcher dies By Physics Today on December 29, 2011 5:06 PM No Comments No TrackBacks Nature On 29 December 2008, chemistry research assistant Sheharbano Sangji suffered third-degree burns when the t-butyl lithium she was drawing from a bottle via a syringe burst into flames . She wasn’t wearing a lab coat , and her clothes caught fire . She died in the hospital 18 days later . In the wake of Sangji’s death , UCLA tightened its safety policies but despite calls to improve academia’s safety standards across the US , there’s little evidence that

  • Voyager 1 races toward interstellar space

    Updated: 2011-12-29 22:04:52
    NPR: Traveling at 636 miles per minute, Voyager 1 is headed toward interstellar space . Right now, the craft is in the outermost layer of the heliosphere, the bubble of charged particles the Sun forms around itself. The solar wind in that area is nil, but the 100-fold greater intensity of high-energy electrons in elsewhere in the galaxy indicates an approaching boundary. Voyager 1 is expected to cross that boundary sometime in the next three years.

  • A Year Well Blogged | Cosmic Variance

    Updated: 2011-12-29 19:33:11
    ‘Tis the season when bloggers, playing out the string between Xmas and New Year’s, fill the void with greatest-hits lists from the year just passed. But a question inevitably arises: how does one decide which posts to include? There are many different criteria, and preferring one to another might lead to very different lists. This [...]

  • Synopsis: Even Flow

    Updated: 2011-12-29 15:00:00
    An obstacle at the exit of a silo relieves local pressure, aiding the flow of small particles that might otherwise clog. Published Thu Dec 29, 2011

  • Synopsis: Dark Transmissions

    Updated: 2011-12-29 15:00:00
    An unusual excess of radio emission from outside the Milky Way may come from dark matter. Published Thu Dec 29, 2011

  • Synopsis: Mind the Gap

    Updated: 2011-12-29 15:00:00
    Simulations of a key quantum algorithm reveal the time required for executing a sample computation and point to possible methods for optimization. Published Thu Dec 29, 2011

  • Grail probes to help scientists map Moon’s gravity field

    Updated: 2011-12-28 17:46:13
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Russia's failing science program News Picks home Grail probes to help scientists map Moon’s gravity field By Physics Today on December 28, 2011 12:46 PM No Comments No TrackBacks SF Gate A pair of spacecraft known as Grail-A and Grail-B are set to enter orbit around the Moon over the New Year’s weekend . They launched from the Florida coast in September and are independently traveling to their destination . Over the next two months they will fly in formation around the Moon until they’re approximately 56 kilometers above the lunar surface and about 200 kilometers apart . At that point , regional changes in the Moon’s gravity field will

  • Russia's failing science program

    Updated: 2011-12-28 15:35:56
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Careers going global News Picks home Grail probes to help scientists map Moon’s gravity field Russia's failing science program By Physics Today on December 28, 2011 10:35 AM No Comments No TrackBacks BBC Yet another Soyuz rocket launch has failed . After liftoff from Russia’s Plesetsk spaceport on Friday , 23 December , the Soyuz-2 vehicle was unable to put a communications satellite into orbit . It is one of several failed attempts this year , including Phobus-Grunt in November and the Progress cargo spacecraft , which was to take supplies to astronauts aboard the International Space Station , in August . Russia’s problems could

  • Science with ties to Fermilab top year-end ‘best of’ lists

    Updated: 2011-12-28 15:12:10
    Christmas time brings not only presents and pretty cookies but an outpouring of media lists proffering the best science stories of the year and predicting those that will top the list in 2012. While the lists varied wildly everyone seemed excited by a few of the same things: upsetting Einstein’s theory of special relativity, a [...]

  • Does the world want it to be like that?

    Updated: 2011-12-27 20:21:58
    Lincoln, Nebraska, where I live, is on the western end of the Central time zone, and as a result, the sun goes down pretty late on the clock here. Even at this time of year, sundown isn’t until 5 PM, and it’s not really dark until at least six. We usually get home with the [...]

  • Careers going global

    Updated: 2011-12-27 19:43:47
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Spain cuts science ministry in government changeover News Picks home Careers going global By Physics Today on December 27, 2011 2:43 PM No Comments No TrackBacks New Scientist While globetrotting is not a prerequisite to winning the coveted Nobel prize , having a CV that looks like a much-stamped passport is increasingly seen as the signature of an ambitious and motivated young scientist , 8221 writes Jessica Griggs for New Scientist . According to a report published by the Royal Society in London , over the past 15 years , more than 35 of articles published in international journals involved international collaborations . A UK

  • Spain cuts science ministry in government changeover

    Updated: 2011-12-27 14:50:50
    Nature: Spain’s Ministry of Science has been cut by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, a member of the People’s Party. Rajoy had pledged to reduce the number of government ministries from 15 to 12. Responsibility for science and research will now be the purview of Luis de Guindos, the minister of economy and competition. The Ministry of Science was created in 2000, under a People’s Party government, but fell under a joint ministry with education from 2004 to 2008, then again became a dedicated ministry from 2008 to 2011.

  • Higgs for the Holidays

    Updated: 2011-12-23 21:47:47
     –  By Theorist David Morrissey & Particle Physicist Anadi Canepa  Last week we hosted two particle physics workshops at TRIUMF – an ATLAS Canada collaboration meeting and a joint meeting for theorists and experimentalists to study new LHC results.  Everything went smoothly, no participants were lost to the wilds of Vancouver, and we had some [...]

  • Nanoantennas could lead to optical innovations

    Updated: 2011-12-23 20:00:07
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar NRC approves cutting-edge design for nuclear reactors News Picks home Nanoantennas could lead to optical innovations By Physics Today on December 23, 2011 3:00 PM No Comments No TrackBacks ScienceDaily Researchers at Purdue University have designed V-shaped gold and silicon nanoantennas that can cause broadband light to bend in unusual ways , including with negative angles of refraction . Extending earlier work by a group at Harvard University , the Purdue team showed that an array of the nanoantennas at a material interface can change the phase and propagation direction of light over a broad range in the near-IR . The arrays , much

  • NRC approves cutting-edge design for nuclear reactors

    Updated: 2011-12-23 18:41:20
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Millimeter-wave imager safer , more accurate than x-ray method News Picks home Nanoantennas could lead to optical innovations NRC approves cutting-edge design for nuclear reactors By Physics Today on December 23, 2011 1:41 PM No Comments No TrackBacks New York Times Yesterday the Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC unanimously approved a radical new reactor design , writes Matthew Wald for the New York Times To diminish the probability of an accident , the Westinghouse AP1000 relies more on gravity and natural heat convection and less on pumps , valves , and human operators than other models . In addition , even if there is a total loss

  • LHC Reports Discovery of its First New Particle

    Updated: 2011-12-23 15:22:00
    The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) on the Franco-Swiss border has made its first clear observation of a new particle since opening in 2009. It is called Chi_b (3P) and will help scientists understand better the forces that hold matter together. The as-yet unpublished discovery is reported on the Arxiv pre-print server...from BBC News Online

  • Millimeter-wave imager safer, more accurate than x-ray method

    Updated: 2011-12-22 17:02:33
    , Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar LHC observes new particle News Picks home Millimeter-wave imager safer , more accurate than x-ray method By Physics Today on December 22, 2011 12:02 PM No Comments No TrackBacks Sciencenewsline A new detector can sense knives hidden in packages , impurities in chocolate , and explosive powder in pieces of mail—all without the use of ionizing radiation . Called SAMMI , short for standalone millimeter-wave imager , the device can see through many nontransparent , nonmetallic materials , according to its developers at the Fraunhofer Institute for High-Frequency Physics and Radar Techniques FHR in Wachtberg , Germany . It can even detect

  • This Week’s Hype

    Updated: 2011-12-22 16:44:12
    The Japanese are getting in on the string theory hype business, with KEK issuing a press release today with the title: The mechanism that explains why our universe was born with 3 dimensions: a 40-year-old puzzle of superstring theory solved … Continue reading →

  • LHC observes new particle

    Updated: 2011-12-22 16:02:04
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Windsor Castle installs hydroelectric plant News Picks home Millimeter-wave imager safer , more accurate than x-ray method LHC observes new particle By Physics Today on December 22, 2011 11:02 AM No Comments No TrackBacks BBC Researchers at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider have observed a new particle the first since the facility’s initial proton proton collision in 2009. Called χ b 3 P it is composed of a bottom quark and a bottom antiquark that are bound together . Although χ particles have been seen in previous experiments , the χ b 3 P is in a more excited state . It's interesting for what it tells us about the force that holds the

  • The twelve days of winter break: particle physics edition

    Updated: 2011-12-22 15:00:12
    As symmetry breaking closes down for its long winter's nap, please enjoy (or at least put up with) a badly adapted holiday song and the chance to reflect on a fascinating year in particle physics.

  • Happy 10th Birthday, WLCG!

    Updated: 2011-12-21 22:00:41
    Amid all the hype and excitement of the new physics being announced from experiments at the Large Hadron Collider in 2011, there was another, little known, cause for celebration: the anniversary of the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG).

  • Making Sense of CERN’s Higgs Circus | The Crux

    Updated: 2011-12-21 21:29:32
    Amir D. Aczel has been closely associated with CERN and particle physics for a number of years and often consults on statistical issues relating to physics. He is also the author of 18 popular books on mathematics and science. By now you’ve heard the news-non-news about the Higgs: there are hints of a Higgs—even “strong [...]

  • Numerical Family Connections

    Updated: 2011-12-21 18:23:04
    Just a brief random thought at the start of the first winter break in my life where I’m not visiting or living with my parents… Whenever I need the number π — that is, the ratio between a circle’s circumference and its diameter — in computer analysis code I’m writing, I always write it out [...]

  • Short Items

    Updated: 2011-12-21 17:03:23
    A few short items: The Multiverse propaganda campaign continues this month, with a piece by Alan Lightman in Harpers entitled The Accidental Universe: Science’s Crisis of Faith. The content is pretty much the usual: string theory implies an untestable multiverse, … Continue reading →

  • Windsor Castle installs hydroelectric plant

    Updated: 2011-12-21 16:54:52
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar New study reexamines math gender gap News Picks home Windsor Castle installs hydroelectric plant By Physics Today on December 21, 2011 11:54 AM No Comments No TrackBacks Daily Mail The UK's Windsor Castle is going green : Yesterday two 40-ton turbines were lifted into the River Thames . Once installed , they are expected to churn out 300 kW of energy every hour enough to provide about half the estate’s electricity needs . Resembling giant steel screws , the turbines are based on a 2000-year-old design by Greek mathematician and engineer Archimedes . The project could help further the UK's goal of obtaining 15 of its energy from

  • New study reexamines math gender gap

    Updated: 2011-12-21 15:36:04
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar Iron oxide in Earth's interior exhibits unexpected electrical conductivity News Picks home Windsor Castle installs hydroelectric plant New study reexamines math gender gap By Physics Today on December 21, 2011 10:36 AM No Comments No TrackBacks Science Two researchers have conducted a new study in which they debunk several commonly held myths about gender and math performance . Among the myths they address is the speculation put forth by Lawrence Summers when he was president of Harvard University that males may have greater variability in intellectual mathematical abilities than females . Janet Mertz of the University of Wisconsin

  • On the edge of the icepack

    Updated: 2011-12-20 19:13:35
    Now that we might (maybe, possibly, could be, it could go away, let’s be careful about what we say here lest we put a jinx on it…) be seeing hints of a Higgs, it’s time of some cautionary tales that a ‘discovery’ is not the end of the story, it’s only the beginning. When I [...]

  • Iron oxide in Earth's interior exhibits unexpected electrical conductivity

    Updated: 2011-12-20 18:43:31
    Physics Today News Picks A blog of hand-picked science news from the staff of Physics Today Home Print edition Advertising Buyers Guide Jobs Events calendar NIH director retracts congratulatory email News Picks home Iron oxide in Earth's interior exhibits unexpected electrical conductivity By Physics Today on December 20, 2011 1:43 PM No Comments No TrackBacks BBC At the extreme pressures and temperatures of Earth’s interior , iron oxide changes from insulator to conductor while still retaining its structure , according to a team at the Carnegie Institution of Washington.The researchers subjected the material to conditions found at the boundary between Earth’s two innermost layers and found that at a pressure of 690 000 atmospheres and a temperature of 1650 C , the iron oxide metallizes

  • U.S. ships world’s largest digital camera to Chile

    Updated: 2011-12-20 15:00:49
    A four-ton digital camera landed safely in Chile this month on its way to making history by enabling the world’s largest galaxy survey, starting next year. Getting the camera there was a worldwide feat of technology and transportation prowess.

  • Un Américain à Paris

    Updated: 2011-12-20 11:05:16
    Qu’est-ce qui peut pousser les Parisiens à patienter dans le froid un samedi 17 décembre, plutôt que de courir les magasins de Noël ? Simplement la crainte qu’il n’y ait pas assez de place pour assister à la toute première conférence de l’Américain Saul Perlmutter, après avoir reçu son Nobel de physique à Stockholm. En [...]

  • A cheaper way to purify liquid argon for neutrino experiments

    Updated: 2011-12-19 15:00:01
    Today’s high-end experiments are pushing scientists to invent new technologies to meet the demands of the next generation of physics. These innovations, however, must be balanced with creative cost-saving strategies. One expense currently under evaluation is the construction of liquid argon tanks, which play a vital role in sensitive neutrino experiments.

  • Trend: How Solid is Supersolid?

    Updated: 2011-12-19 15:00:00
    Macroscopic quantum properties of helium-4, one of the simplest and oldest elements in the universe, continue to puzzle and amaze scientists. Supertransport in solid helium-4 is the most elusive and controversial conundrum of all.

  • Visiting Vietnam

    Updated: 2011-12-19 06:23:46
    Quantum Diaries Thoughts on work and life from particle physicists from around the . world Home About Quantum Diaries Latest Posts All Blogs John Felde UC Davis USA View Blog Read Bio Latest Posts 2011.11.22 Recent Events at UC Davis 2011.11.09 First Double Chooz Neutrino Oscillation Result 2011.09.22 Physics GRE Bootcamp USLHC USLHC USA View Blog Read Bio Latest Posts 2011.12.13 Higgs seminar discussion 2011.12.13 Don’t let the black dots fool you 2011.12.13 The CERN Higgs seminar Frank Simon MPI for Physics Germany View Blog Read Bio Latest Posts 2011.12.14 After the talk is before the talk 2011.10.24 Breathe 2011.10.22 The CLIC Physics and Detectors CDR Flip Tanedo USLHC USA View Blog Read Bio Latest Posts 2011.12.12 The Night Before Higgsmas” 2011.12.01 Dispatch from the intensity

  • The Week of Higgs

    Updated: 2011-12-18 08:26:09
    It has been an exciting week at CERN. Of course rumors had been flying for a while already. And even though most people in the theory division are not directly related to the experiments, people know people and information was passed around. Certainly, I wasn’t going to miss the announcement of the results. To make [...]

  • CERN is holding back data

    Updated: 2011-12-18 06:22:00
    : Physics Without Ideology Bite by Bite The search for a theory of everything : satire about bad candidates and gentle fun about good candidates , such as the strand-spaghetti . model 18 December 2011 CERN is holding back data CERN has collected about 5.7 fb^-1 data . But the December announcements by ATLAS and CMS only use 4.76 or 4.9 of them . The December announcements also do not analyze a number of other decay channels . Why Maybe the Higgs bumps would disappear with the larger number of data Would the hint of a Higgs disappear if all data and all channels would be used Did CERN tweak the data in such a way that it looks like a hint of Higgs , in order to keep optimism in the media Since many months almost a year CERN also did not update the sheet which summarizes all its negative BSM

  • Multiverse and Professor Doktor Dietmar Lüst

    Updated: 2011-12-18 05:51:00
    : Physics Without Ideology Bite by Bite The search for a theory of everything : satire about bad candidates and gentle fun about good candidates , such as the strand-spaghetti . model 18 December 2011 Multiverse and Professor Doktor Dietmar Lüst A friend sent me a new book about string theory by Dietmar Lüst or Luest Do not read it . There is no original or interesting idea in the book . All is copied from other popularizing string theory books . He even manages to copy copying text is a hobby in his country only the worst ideas across the field : a lot about the book is on the . multiverse I think every time a professor uses the word multiverse' , his salary should be cut by 20 Lüst would be sleeping under bridges . He is an example of what happens when a smart man gets too much influence

  • No Higgs found yet

    Updated: 2011-12-17 16:45:00
    Look at the data collected at CERN. The plot with the strongest evidence is the one in the digamma channels. The two curves by ATLAS and CMS (see the links in the post by Woit) are extremely disappointing: no sober person will see any signal in those curves. The rest is hype.

  • Fermilab to build Illinois Accelerator Research Center

    Updated: 2011-12-16 20:25:34
    A new accelerator research facility being built at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory will bolster Illinois’ reputation as a technology hub and foster job creation.

  • Synopsis: Defeating Bedlam

    Updated: 2011-12-15 15:00:00
    Combining two noisy information channels can yield noiseless information transmission. Published Thu Dec 15, 2011

  • Synopsis: Pnictide Gap Symmetry

    Updated: 2011-12-15 15:00:00
    The effect of doping on the pairing gap in iron-based superconductors is elucidated in a theoretical study. Published Thu Dec 15, 2011

  • First physics experiments soon to move into former Homestake mine

    Updated: 2011-12-15 00:40:39
    Construction of a 12,000-square-foot research campus a mile underground is nearing completion in the Black Hills of South Dakota, and scientists will begin to move the first physics experiments underground this spring. -- Bill Harlan

  • Il a peut-être l’air mais a-t-il aussi la chanson du Higgs?

    Updated: 2011-12-14 19:17:52
    Le séminaire spécial sur les derniers résultats dans la quête pour le boson de Higgs tenu hier au CERN fut sûrement la présentation la plus excitante de ma carrière. L’ambiance était électrique et l’auditorium était déjà plein à craquer plus de deux heures avant l’heure prévue. Les membres de chaque collaboration, ATLAS et CMS, connaissaient [...]

  • It might look like a Higgs but does it really sing like one?

    Updated: 2011-12-14 19:16:55
    The special CERN seminar on recent Higgs boson results held yesterday was one of the most exciting presentations I ever attended. The ambiance was electricifying and the room was packed more than two hours before it even started. Members of each collaboration working on this, namely CMS and  ATLAS, both knew their half of the [...]

  • Kicking cancer with carbon ions

    Updated: 2011-12-14 13:15:22
    Medical physics is getting heavier. Shooting intense beams of protons into tumors to destroy them while leaving nearby tissues largely unharmed has been in vogue since the ’60s. Globally, however, many centers offering such beam-based cancer treatment, known as hadron therapy, are looking to more massive carbon ions for their unique therapeutic promise. These particles [...]

  • First Glimpse of the Higgs Boson: Guest post from Jack Gunion | Cosmic Variance

    Updated: 2011-12-13 23:59:37
    Perhaps best known in the field of particle physics as the co-author of the Higgs Hunter’s Guide, Jack Gunion has been in the theoretical trenches of the search for the Higgs boson for several decades now. He is a senior professor and leader of the theoretical particle physics group at UC Davis, where he has [...]

  • Glimpses of Higgs

    Updated: 2011-12-13 20:35:04
    Finally, after some frantic waiting filled with rumors, we heard the truth from people at CERN. And we discovered that rumors were just right. Evidence is mounting for a Higgs particle at around 120-130 GeV, after new data were accounted for. All these evidences point toward a Standard Model Higgs. But some caution words are [...]

  • Today’s Higgs Results

    Updated: 2011-12-13 15:05:25
    The discussion after the talks is going on at CERN now, and the results that were presented agree well with what was posted here over the past week or so. This looks a lot like a Higgs near 125 GeV. … Continue reading →

  • Possible signs of the Higgs remain in latest analyses

    Updated: 2011-12-13 14:41:46
    Two experiments at the Large Hadron Collider have nearly eliminated the space in which the Higgs boson could dwell, scientists announced in a seminar held at CERN today. However, the ATLAS and CMS experiments see modest excesses in their data that could soon uncover the famous missing piece of the physics puzzle.

  • This Week’s Hype

    Updated: 2011-12-13 00:59:40
    The announcement at CERN tomorrow of a likely-looking signal for a 125 GeV mass Standard Model Higgs will probably unleash a flood of hype from theorists claiming this as evidence for their favorite Beyond the Standard Model scenario. One obvious … Continue reading →

  • Live blog: Higgs hunt results from CERN

    Updated: 2011-12-13 00:50:46
    : : Log in Email Password Remember me Your login is case sensitive I have forgotten my password Register now Activate my subscription Institutional login Athens login close My New Scientist Home News In-Depth Articles Blogs Opinion TV Galleries Topic Guides Last Word Subscribe Dating new Look for Science Jobs SPACE TECH ENVIRONMENT HEALTH LIFE PHYSICS MATH SCIENCE IN SOCIETY Live blog : Higgs hunt results from CERN 12:50 13 December 2011 Live Physics Math Maggie McKee , physical sciences news editor Image : Maximilien Brice CERN Physics lovers the world over are on the edge of their seats waiting to find out whether the Large Hadron Collider LHC has found any hints of the Higgs boson the particle that is thought to give all other particles . mass Today teams from both of the LHC's main

  • Not Being Announced Tomorrow: Discovery of the Higgs Boson | Cosmic Variance

    Updated: 2011-12-12 18:35:23
    Tomorrow, Tuesday 13 December, there will be a couple of seminars at CERN presented by Fabiola Gianotti and Guido Tonelli, speaking respectively for the ATLAS and CMS collaborations at the LHC. They will be updating us on the current status of the search for the Higgs boson. The seminars will be webcast from CERN, and [...]

  • Higgs Predictions and Results

    Updated: 2011-12-12 15:44:08
    Tomorrow at 14:00 CET CERN will start to unveil the results of this year’s LHC Higgs search, see here. Jester has just posted details consistent with what I’ve been hearing for the past couple weeks, although his numbers are slightly … Continue reading →

  • Viewpoint: Strong Staggered Flux Lattices for Cold Atoms

    Updated: 2011-12-12 15:00:00
    Extremely high magnetic fields have been simulated by laser manipulation of atoms trapped in an optical lattice. Published Mon Dec 12, 2011

  • Yang-Mills scenario: Yet a confirmation

    Updated: 2011-12-12 11:15:57
    While CERN is calming down rumors (see here), research activity on Yang-Mills theories keeps on going on.  A few days ago, a paper by Axel Weber appeared on arxiv  (see here). As my readers know, having discussed this at length, in these last years there has been a hot debate between the proponents of the [...]

  • Discover Interview: Newt Gingrich | DISCOVER Magazine

    Updated: 2011-12-09 18:00:00
    :

  • A new book plays on the mystery of physics machines

    Updated: 2011-12-09 16:53:03
    Underground and closed off from visitors, experiments in particle physics often hide, rather than flaunt, the exotic and intricate machines that seem more at home in a science fiction blockbuster. No space shuttles, rockets or rovers wow visitors at today’s physics laboratories. The tried and true conduit from the underground to the outside world remains in most part the camera.

  • Focus: Nanoscale Patterning of Superconductivity

    Updated: 2011-12-09 15:00:00
    Researchers spatially vary the strength of superconductivity on a nanometer scale using a ferroelectric material on top. Published Fri Dec 09, 2011

  • NASA satellite could reveal if primordial black holes are dark matter

    Updated: 2011-12-09 14:50:01
    (PhysOrg.com) -- The primary objective of NASA’s Kepler satellite, which was launched in March 2009 to orbit the Sun, is to search for Earth-like planets in a portion of the Milky Way galaxy. But now a team of physicists has proposed that Kepler could have a second appealing purpose: to either detect or rule out primordial black holes (PBHs) of a certain mass range as the primary constituent of dark matter.

  • Synopsis: Gamma Rays Carry No Trace of Dark Matter

    Updated: 2011-12-08 15:00:00
    The observation of nearby galaxies provides new and stronger limits on dark matter. Published Thu Dec 08, 2011

  • Synopsis: The Bound and the Free

    Updated: 2011-12-08 15:00:00
    Precisely prepared photon states can probe quantum statistical phenomena and generate intriguing forms of quantum entanglement. Published Thu Dec 08, 2011

  • Synopsis: Unmasking the True Spin Relaxation Time

    Updated: 2011-12-08 15:00:00
    The experimental artifacts known to disrupt magnetic force microscopy measurements of small spin samples can be identified and removed. Published Thu Dec 08, 2011

  • Synopsis: Superposed in a Crystal

    Updated: 2011-12-08 15:00:00
    Spin-dependent forces create quantum superpositions of different structures of a trapped ion crystal. Published Thu Dec 08, 2011

  • Freeing positronium from their dangling bonds

    Updated: 2011-12-07 16:10:33
    Last summer David Cassidy, a scientist at the University of California, Riverside, was busy using silicon to study positronium formation when his team noticed that the positronium, sitting on the silicon surface, didn't behave as it should have.

  • Guest Post: Matt Strassler on Hunting for the Higgs | Cosmic Variance

    Updated: 2011-12-06 16:32:26
    Perhaps you’ve heard of the Higgs boson. Perhaps you’ve heard the phrase “desperately seeking” in this context. We need it, but so far we can’t find it. This all might change soon — there are seminars scheduled at CERN by both of the big LHC collaborations, to update us on their progress in looking for [...]

  • Vital Signs: A Problem of the Heart, Head, or Hands? | DISCOVER Magazine

    Updated: 2011-12-05 16:05:00
    : , ,

  • Viewpoint: Making a Laser Shine Longer

    Updated: 2011-12-05 15:00:00
    Adding a third molecule to an organic semiconductor laser can alter the balance of power among its energy levels and allow continuous rather than pulsed operation. Published Mon Dec 05, 2011

  • Viewpoint: Superconducting Qubits Are Getting Serious

    Updated: 2011-12-05 15:00:00
    When placed inside a 3D electromagnetic cavity, a superconducting qubit can be made potentially more useful because of its large size and long coherence time. Published Mon Dec 05, 2011

  • Pregnancy and the Higgs

    Updated: 2011-12-03 17:07:00
    These are exciting times - for me and for particle physics. The prospects for a Higgs are remote though. The LHC obviously has not found anything.Update on December 14th: a handful of events without statistical importance seen at the LHC have put the world press into a frenzy. We are living in crazy times. Fact: no Higgs has been found, the mass window is even smaller.

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