Holy %$#@!
Um, that’s a different experiment altogether. (But a very popular typo.)
Yep. It’s not just the energy of a single proton-proton collision. It’s 100 000 million protons per bunch crossing at 25 nS intervals, giving 600 million collisions per second. Cite. If something breaks (like a magnet), they don’t have long to divert the beam somewhere safe before it starts doing some serious damage.
If you could stick your head in the LHC beam, I can’t imagine that you would pull much out. The beam level is so much greater than anything ever generated before in a controlled system. The LHC is one of the greatest engineering projects in the world.
I am looking forward to Big Bang Wednesday (as BBC Radio 4 is calling it).
Si
Wow. Just wow. I’m not really amazed that I didn’t catch the typo…after all, I made it. But I am quite shocked that it took the Dope seven hours to notice.
Yes. 1 ton is 4.184 * 10[sup]9[/sup] J, while 1 megaton is 4.184 * 10[sup]15[/sup] (so they’re both in the wrong spot). If this number looks familiar, it’s because it has the same base as the specific heat of water. Since it is difficult to exactly duplicate an explosive event, 1 gram of TNT will have a range from 980 to 1100 calories*. It was arbitrarily defined to be 1000, hence why the 4.184 number looks so familiar.
*Yes, I know I’m mixing units. The field still uses calories as a fundamental unit. I have no idea why.