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Photo credit: QUT SEF Engagement
"Hidden Pieces: The Large Hadron Collider and our dark universe" lecture at QUT on 19/11/2019 given by Dr Steven Goldfarb - a particle physicist working on the ATLAS Experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
This lecture was made possible by Dr Andrew Fielding of QUT's Science and Engineering Faculty, with funding support from the Australian Institute of Physics - AIP, and the Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine - ACPSEM.
Photo credit: QUT SEF Engagement
"Hidden Pieces: The Large Hadron Collider and our dark universe" lecture at QUT on 19/11/2019 given by Dr Steven Goldfarb - a particle physicist working on the ATLAS Experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
This lecture was made possible by Dr Andrew Fielding of QUT's Science and Engineering Faculty, with funding support from the Australian Institute of Physics - AIP, and the Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine - ACPSEM.
Photo credit: QUT SEF Engagement
"Hidden Pieces: The Large Hadron Collider and our dark universe" lecture at QUT on 19/11/2019 given by Dr Steven Goldfarb - a particle physicist working on the ATLAS Experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
This lecture was made possible by Dr Andrew Fielding of QUT's Science and Engineering Faculty, with funding support from the Australian Institute of Physics - AIP, and the Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine - ACPSEM.
The CERN Control Center, where they run all of the accelerators at CERN. (Sorry for the not great photo....)
Shows something of the scale of the work - and this is just an obsolete miniature version by current standards!
Photo credit: QUT SEF Engagement
"Hidden Pieces: The Large Hadron Collider and our dark universe" lecture at QUT on 19/11/2019 given by Dr Steven Goldfarb - a particle physicist working on the ATLAS Experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
This lecture was made possible by Dr Andrew Fielding of QUT's Science and Engineering Faculty, with funding support from the Australian Institute of Physics - AIP, and the Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine - ACPSEM.
Photo credit: QUT SEF Engagement
"Hidden Pieces: The Large Hadron Collider and our dark universe" lecture at QUT on 19/11/2019 given by Dr Steven Goldfarb - a particle physicist working on the ATLAS Experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
This lecture was made possible by Dr Andrew Fielding of QUT's Science and Engineering Faculty, with funding support from the Australian Institute of Physics - AIP, and the Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine - ACPSEM.
These are some of the banks of electronics that process the mind-boggling amounts of data produced by all the detectors in the experiment. From 40 million collisions per second, only the data from the approximately 200 "interesting" collisions per second is kept. This is done through a combination of electronic processing (faster than computing), then data capture/storage, then analysis by computers.
If you would like to learn more about ATLAS, there is a great online resource here, and another for CERN (with the other experiments) here.
Geneva, Switzerland
March 2014
Photo credit: QUT SEF Engagement
"Hidden Pieces: The Large Hadron Collider and our dark universe" lecture at QUT on 19/11/2019 given by Dr Steven Goldfarb - a particle physicist working on the ATLAS Experiment at CERN's Large Hadron Collider.
This lecture was made possible by Dr Andrew Fielding of QUT's Science and Engineering Faculty, with funding support from the Australian Institute of Physics - AIP, and the Australasian College of Physical Scientists and Engineers in Medicine - ACPSEM.
Back above ground, we discuss the awesomeness of our tour. And ask Laura more questions.
Geneva, Switzerland
March 2014