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branches:collider_physics [2018/03/17 10:07] jakobadmin [Why is it interesting?] |
branches:collider_physics [2018/10/11 13:56] (current) jakobadmin [Concrete] |
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====== Collider Physics ====== | ====== Collider Physics ====== | ||
- | <tabbox Why is it interesting?> | ||
- | <blockquote>A particle collider is essentially a large microscope. It doesn’t use light, it uses fast particles, and it doesn’t probe a target plate, it probes other particles, but the idea is the same: It lets us look at matter very closely. A larger collider would let us look closer than we have so far, and that’s the most obvious way to learn more about the structure of matter.<cite>https://backreaction.blogspot.de/2018/03/the-multiworse-is-coming.htmly</cite></blockquote> | ||
- | <blockquote> | + | <tabbox Intuitive> |
- | Richard P. Feynman once said that doing elementary particle physics is a lot like banging two fine Swiss watches against each other and trying to figure out their workings by examining the debris. That was the challenge. | + | |
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- | <cite>From My Life As A Quant by Emanuel Derman</cite> | + | |
- | </blockquote> | + | |
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- | {{ :branches:tocllider.png?nolink |}} | + | |
- | <tabbox Layman> | + | |
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* Anomaly! Collider Physics and the Quest for New Phenomena by Dorigo | * Anomaly! Collider Physics and the Quest for New Phenomena by Dorigo | ||
- | <tabbox Student> | + | <tabbox Concrete> |
- | * * [[https://fliptomato.wordpress.com/2008/09/13/collider-physics-for-theory-students/|Collider Physics for Theory Students]] by Flip Tanedo | + | * [[https://fliptomato.wordpress.com/2008/09/13/collider-physics-for-theory-students/|Collider Physics for Theory Students]] by Flip Tanedo |
- | <tabbox Researcher> | + | * [[branches:http://pages.physics.cornell.edu/~ajd268/Notes/LHCcourse.pdf|CRASH COURSE IN THE LHC]] by Nima Arkani-Hamed |
+ | <tabbox Abstract> | ||
[{{ :livingstone.png?nolink |http://www.slac.stanford.edu/econf/C010630/papers/MT1001.PDF}}] | [{{ :livingstone.png?nolink |http://www.slac.stanford.edu/econf/C010630/papers/MT1001.PDF}}] | ||
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<cite>http://www.nytimes.com/1993/09/05/books/perhaps-this-universe-is-only-a-test.html?pagewanted=all</cite> | <cite>http://www.nytimes.com/1993/09/05/books/perhaps-this-universe-is-only-a-test.html?pagewanted=all</cite> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
- | <tabbox Examples> | + | <tabbox Why is it interesting?> |
+ | <blockquote>A particle collider is essentially a large microscope. It doesn’t use light, it uses fast particles, and it doesn’t probe a target plate, it probes other particles, but the idea is the same: It lets us look at matter very closely. A larger collider would let us look closer than we have so far, and that’s the most obvious way to learn more about the structure of matter.<cite>https://backreaction.blogspot.de/2018/03/the-multiworse-is-coming.htmly</cite></blockquote> | ||
- | --> Example1# | + | <blockquote> |
+ | Richard P. Feynman once said that doing elementary particle physics is a lot like banging two fine Swiss watches against each other and trying to figure out their workings by examining the debris. That was the challenge. | ||
- | + | <cite>From My Life As A Quant by Emanuel Derman</cite> | |
- | <-- | + | </blockquote> |
- | --> Example2:# | + | {{ :branches:tocllider.png?nolink |}} |
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- | <-- | + | |
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- | <tabbox History> | + | |
</tabbox> | </tabbox> | ||