Volume 05 | Issue 04 | September 08

Issue Contents

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Particle Physics Benefits: Adding it Up

Stories abound about how particle physics benefits education, the economy, and society as a whole. Quantifying those benefits would help particle physics better demonstrate its value to the country.

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    Editorial:
    The Benefits of Particle Physics

    The benefits of particle physics are myriad but the field must go beyond anecdotes to quantifiable data.

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    Commentary:
    Alan Boyle

    In the past year, millions of people became interested in particle physics, drawn by a sense of wonder and fear of the unknown.

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    Departments:
    Signal to Background

    151-year-old recording sings for the first time; labs on Jeopardy!; fueling up on grass; cosmic rays point to better solar panels; electronic circuits with altitude; letters.

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    Department:
    symmetry breaking

    A summary of recent stories, published weekdays, in symmetry breaking, www.symmetrymagazine.org/breaking/

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    Feature:
    A Fearlessly Creative Workforce

    Many of the people trained in particle physics move on to industry, where their skills are in high demand. There you can find a theorist exploring for oil or an accelerator scientist working on cancer treatments.

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    Feature:
    The Power of Proton Therapy

    When it comes to getting rid of cancer, the sharpest scalpel may be a proton beam. Technology conceived and hatched in high-energy physics is now treating thousands of patients per year, with fewer side effects.

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    Snapshot:
    LCLS Construction

    The world’s first hard X-ray free electron laser takes shape at SLAC, where it will revolutionize research in drug development, green products, and industrial technology.

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    Deconstruction:
    MRI

    Particle physics played a key role in the life-saving medical technology known as Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Its detailed images of soft tissue nearly eliminated the need for exploratory surgery.

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    Essay:
    Jordan Sorokin

    "After visiting Fermilab, I know that I had only one passionate aspiration, one life-long quest: to become a physicist. The visit sparked an interest inside of me like an electrical wire jerking radically with every ounce of new knowledge."

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    Logbook:
    Superconducting Magnets

    Today’s particle accelerators and MRI machines wouldn’t exist without superconducting electromagnets. The road to the first patent for this technology took nearly six decades and ended in a photo finish.

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    Explain it in 60 Seconds:
    Particle Accelerators

    Particle accelerators (often referred to as "atom smashers") use strong electric fields to push streams of subatomic particles—usually protons or electrons—to tremendous speeds. They’re used by the thousands worldwide in physics, medicine, and industry.

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symmetry Breaking

January 31, 2009
CERN has posted the next in its series of LHC repair updates. After it was determined that the likely cause of the September 19, 2008 incident was a faulty splice, CERN checked the rest of the LHC for warning signs of similar problems in other superconducting magnets. One magnet that was identified as a candidate for potential problems was removed from the LHC two weeks ago, opened up and inspected, and it has been confirmed that there is a lack of solder on the splice joint in question.
January 31, 2009
Thirty years ago today, on January 31, 1979, the United States and the People's Republic of China (PRC) signed a formal agreement to cooperate in the field of high-energy physics.
January 30, 2009
If you're a fan of the Large Hadron Collider, you might see something familiar when driving around the streets of historic Charleston, South Carolina. Mural artist Josef Kristofoletti spent three weeks in September 2008, just after the LHC's highly publicized launch and subsequent shutdown, painting a representation of the ATLAS detector on the wall of the Redux Contemporary Art Center.
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On the Cover
Issue Cover

What could a radial tire possibly have in common with particle physics? Accelerator technology. In physics, it boosts particles to nearly the speed of light; in industry, it’s used in creating the materials that go into tires. As a bonus, this avoids the use of solvents that can pollute the environment.
Photo: Reidar Hahn, Fermilab

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Logbook Archive
Photo - Logbook: Archive

Particle Data Book

Sep 2006
This year, the Particle Data Group celebrates its 50th anniversary with a release of a 1230-page edition of the Review of Particle Physics...

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Explain it in 60 Seconds Archive
Photo - Explain it in 60 Seconds: Archive

Rare Decays

Mar/Apr 2008
Rare particle decays could provide a unique glimpse of subatomic processes that elude the direct reach of even the most powerful...

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