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Hangout With Cern: Lhc And The Grid, Hangout With CERN


krash661

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they usually hold this every Thursday.

 

Thursday, April 18, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

What is antimatter? Why does antimatter matter? Series 3 of Hangout with CERN starts with a bang! A special hangout with CERN and the Google Science Fair that takes us into the weird and wonderful world of antimatter.

 

CERN physicists Tara Shears and Niels Madsen will talk to host Shree Bose, Google Science Fair 2011 grand prize winner, about this mysterious part of our universe. What antimatter research is going on at CERN and what are the implications? If all goes to plan, CERNs Rolf Landua will also show us the Hollywood-side of antimatter!

 

This "Hangout with CERN" is broadcast live on Thursday 18 April at 17:00 CET, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube. Post your questions in advance in the comments below, or on Twitter to @CERN and @googlescifair with the hashtags #askCERN and #GSF2013 .

 

Google Science Fair is an online science competition open to students aged 13-18 from around the globe. Students can register now at googlesciencefair.com, the closing date is 30 April 2013. Find out more about CERNs involvement in Google Science Fair at http://goo.gl/N9f3G

 

See CERNs previous hangouts via http://goo.gl/dbnrV and past shows from Google Science Fair 2013 Hangout On Air series at http://goo.gl/JfJJX

 

Be sure to follow CERN and the LHC experiments on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cern

http://www.facebook.com/ALICE.EXPERIMENT

http://www.facebook.com/ATLASexperiment

http://www.facebook.com/CMSexperiment

 

 

they usually hold this every Thursday.

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will try and check it out next week. The triple A S do a similar webseminar most weeks - worth checking out

yeah, i'll post as they come to remind everyone..

 

and also could you provide a link for this tripple A S

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Hangout with CERN: Extra Dimensions

 

Thursday, April 25, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

In this week's hangout we're joined by special guests theorists Lisa Randall and Raman Sundrum, authors of two of the most cited papers in physics for the past ten years. They join CERN physicists as we look at how the LHC experiments are investigating extra dimensions.

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 25 April at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN. We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

 

Want some background on the topic of extra dimensions, watch this video

from "Piled Higher and Deeper" by Jorge Cham www.phdcomics.com © Jorge Cham.

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tomorrow,

 

Thursday, May 2, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

In this week's hangout we're joined by special guests from TEDxCERN to find out more about the event happening on 3 May at CERN: http://www.facebook.com/events/297803513686045/.

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 2 May at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN. We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

 

friday,

 

Friday, May 3, 2013

1:45pm in UTC+02

 

Watch the webcast via http://tedxcern.ch/ or http://webcast.cern.ch/

 

Going beyond particle physics, TEDxCERN will provide a stage for the expression of science in multiple dimensions and disciplines, unveiling a world in which physics intersects with other multi-dimensional disciplines and thought.

 

TEDxCERN will take place on 3 May 2013 at CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland, and will be webcast live throughout many of CERN's member institutes. For more info see: http://tedxcern.ch/ and http://www.facebook.com/tedxcern/

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Friday, May 3, 2013
1:45pm in UTC+02

Watch the webcast via http://tedxcern.ch/ or http://webcast.cern.ch/

Going beyond particle physics, TEDxCERN will provide a stage for the expression of science in multiple dimensions and disciplines, unveiling a world in which physics intersects with other multi-dimensional disciplines and thought.

TEDxCERN will take place on 3 May 2013 at CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland, and will be webcast live throughout many of CERN's member institutes. For more info see: http://tedxcern.ch/ and http://www.facebook.com/tedxcern/

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Hangout with CERN: Dimensions Multiplied

 

Thursday, May 16, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

In this hangout we're joined by special guests from TED-Ed to find out more about the animations that premiered at the TEDxCERN event on 3 May.

 

Some of the CERN scientific contributors and TED-Ed animation contributors will join the hangout to tell us more and to answer your questions. You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN. We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 16 May at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

To watch all 5 CERN TED-ED animations and dig deeper into the subjects see:

 

The beginning of the universe, for beginners

Lesson by Tom Whyntie, animation by Hornet Inc.

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-beginning-of-the-universe-for-beginners-tom-whyntie

 

Exploration on the Big Data frontier

Lesson by Tim Smith, animation by TED-Ed.

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/exploration-on-the-big-data-frontier-tim-smith

 

Dark matter: The matter we can't see

Lesson by James Gillies, animation by TED-Ed.

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/dark-matter-the-matter-we-can-t-see-james-gillies

 

What happened to antimatter?

Lesson by Rolf Landua, animation by TED-Ed.

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-happened-to-antimatter-rolf-landua

 

The basics of boson

Lesson by Dave Barney and Steve Goldfarb, animation by Jeanette Nørgaard.

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-basics-of-boson-dave-barney-and-steve-goldfarb

 

Want to watch our previous hangouts? They're all available via:

 

Be sure to follow CERN, TEDxCERN and the LHC experiments on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cern

http://www.facebook.com/tedxcern

http://www.facebook.com/TEDEducation

http://www.facebook.com/ALICE.EXPERIMENT

http://www.facebook.com/ATLASexperiment

http://www.facebook.com/CMSexperiment

 

Official websites: http://youtube.com/CERNTV and http://hangouts.web.cern.ch/

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Hangout with CERN: Dimensions Multiplied

 

Thursday, May 16, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

In this hangout we're joined by special guests from TED-Ed to find out more about the animations that premiered at the TEDxCERN event on 3 May.

 

Some of the CERN scientific contributors and TED-Ed animation contributors will join the hangout to tell us more and to answer your questions. You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN. We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 16 May at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

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Hangout with CERN: ISOLDE - the dream of the alchemists

 

Thursday, May 30, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

In this week's hangout scientists from the ISOLDE facility at CERN explain how the facility fulfils the old alchemical dream of changing one element into another!

 

This hangout follows on from last week's hangout, where we spoke about the latest ISOLDE news of pear-shaped atomic nuclei and a fundamental property of the rarest element on Earth (

).

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 30 May at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN . We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

 

Read more about ISOLDE here:

http://home.web.cern.ch/about/experiments/isolde

 

Want to watch our previous hangouts? They're all available via:

 

Be sure to follow CERN and the LHC experiments on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cern

http://www.facebook.com/ALICE.EXPERIMENT

http://www.facebook.com/ATLASexperiment

http://www.facebook.com/CMSexperiment

 

Official websites: http://youtube.com/CERNTV and http://hangouts.web.cern.ch/

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Hangout with CERN: Upgrading with TALENT

 

Thursday, June 13, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

The world’s largest particle accelerator, CERN's Large Hadron Collider, is preparing to run at higher energies. With collisions on hold, engineers and physicists are busy consolidating and upgrading the accelerator, the experiments and more.

 

In this week's hangout, researchers from the TALENT project give us an insight into their work to help upgrade the ATLAS detector. Find out how cutting-edge engineering, software and physics analysis are working together to make a gigantic detector even greater!

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 13 June at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN. We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

 

Read more about the TALENT project http://cern.ch/talent/ and keep up-to-date with the ongoing upgrades via http://home.web.cern.ch/

 

This image shows the first ATLAS inner detector end-cap after complete insertion within the liquid argon cryostat, see more images here: http://www.atlas.ch/photos/inner-detector-combined.html

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

On 4th July 2012, CERN announced the discovery of a new boson later confirmed to be "a Higgs boson", but which one? Is it the Higgs boson predicted by the Standard Model of particle physics or one of the five Higgs bosons associated with "supersymmetry", a principle that attempts to fix the few remaining problems of the Standard Model?

 

In this week's hangout, theoretical physicist John Ellis (pictured in the banner above) joins experimental physicists to talk about supersymmetry, also known as "SUSY". What is it, why, and how does it link with the Higgs boson?

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 20 June at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN. We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

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Hangout with CERN: The Dark Side of the Universe

 

Thursday, June 27, 2013

5:00pm in UTC+02

 

Google+ Hangout: Watch live on http://youtube.com/CERNTV

 

Dark matter is a mysterious type of matter that no one can see but that makes up 27% of the content of the Universe. What is it? How do we know it's there? What are experiments at CERN doing to find out about it?

 

This week's hangout features physicists from LHC, AMS and CAST experiments at CERN to talk about what they're doing to explore the "dark side" of the Universe.

 

Join this "Hangout with CERN" broadcast live on Thursday 27 June at 17:00 CEST, on CERN's Google+ and YouTube pages, with a recording later available on YouTube.

 

You can post questions in advance in the comments below or on Twitter to @CERN with the hashtag #askCERN. We'll pick the best ones to answer and we may even invite you to participate in the live hangout!

 

Find out more about dark matter by reading our blog: http://www.quantumdiaries.org/2013/06/26/does-dark-matter-really-exist/ and watching the recent CERN TED-Ed animation

 

The banner image, taken by the Hubble Space Telescope, shows a gravitational lens mirage known as a Horseshoe Einstein Ring. Gravitational lenses allow astronomers to determine the mass and dark matter content of a galaxy (Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap111221.html).

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