Norman Albers Posted January 13, 2009 Posted January 13, 2009 (edited) Ferchrissake I will not make further private jokes about putting things into the B-field!¡!¡! I worked outside the beamline in the data shack at the Brookhaven Nat. lab beamline at 3 GEV, for two months in 1970. We wore radiation badges checked weekly. No doubt a few errant tools are found when a synchrotron first circulates. Safety regs??? Edited January 13, 2009 by Norman Albers
solidspin Posted January 13, 2009 Posted January 13, 2009 safety regs: really HUGE effing sign in red, yellow and black that says "High magnetic field. Authorized persons only." locked door - (somebody left a wood block in it to keep it ajar). Yep, I'm submitting a PRT to get beamtime @ one of the beamlines @ the light source, which should again be accelerating and decelerating electrons @ ~0.6C on or about 1.15.09. They dumped the electron "bunch" last month so they could do maintenance. They've drastically reconfigured the beamlines since you were there - they have a "button-key-button-key" scenario, which forces you 2x to be out of the hutch before the beryllium window is opened.
Norman Albers Posted January 17, 2009 Posted January 17, 2009 Olaf DreyerBackground Independent Quantum Field Theory and the Cosmological Constant Problem http://arxiv.org/hep-th/0409048 this is a 4-page paper addressing the cosmological constant problem in a new way. here is the author's summary: "We introduce the notion of background independent quantum field theory. The distinguishing feature of this theory is that the dynamics can be formulated without recourse to a background metric structure. We show in a simple model how the metric properties of spacetime can be recovered from the dynamics. Background independence is not only conceptually desirable but allows for the resolution of a problem haunting ordinary quantum field theory: the cosmological constant problem." This is to me an exciting paper, nice to be able to download it. I'll recommend it to solidspin.
north Posted March 2, 2009 Posted March 2, 2009 I'll take a chance and say that quantum gravity is about gluons if it is true that the further away quarks get from another the stronger the attraction between them is , then why are not gluons considered the essence of quantum gravity ? Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedI'll take a chance and say that quantum gravity is about gluons if it is true that the further away quarks get from another the stronger the attraction between them is , then why are not gluons considered the essence of quantum gravity ? well why not people ?
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