Particle accelerator Essays

  • Particle accelerators

    533 Words  | 2 Pages

    A particle accelerator is a machine that accelerates particles, such as a proton or electron, to extremely high energies. These particles are accelerated to about the speed of light and the only difference between a weak particle accelerator and a strong one is that the stronger particle accelerator’s particles will have more kinetic energy. All particle accelerators have the same 3 basic parts, a source of ions, a tube pumped to a vacuum where the particles can travel, and a way of speeding up the

  • Energy Talk in Particle Accelerators

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    Particle accelerators are considered hallmark of human technological advancement. Colliding subatomic particles in high energies, particle accelerators have brought dramatic paradigm shift in our understanding of the universe. Accelerators generally collide energetic particles together and look for the change in the energy of the system. This measurement of energy in colliding particles plays a vital role in the understanding of the events occurring inside the particle accelerators. Understanding

  • Large Hadrian Collider

    918 Words  | 2 Pages

    Introduction Particle physics deals with the study of the smallest, most intricate objects of nature. Examples of these particles include the atom (10-10 m), nucleus (10-14 m), and quarks (less than 10-19 m) (Ekeren, 2013). These fundamental particles trace back to the moments after the Big Bang. As a way to explore how our universe evolved to what is in existence now, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, abbreviated as CERN, built the world’s most powerful particle accelerator during 1998

  • Antimatter

    2429 Words  | 5 Pages

    Carl Anderson, was examining tracks produced by cosmic rays in a cloud chamber. One particle made a track like an electron, but carvature of its path in the magnetic field was one consistent with a possitive charged particle. He named this new particle a positron. Later, in the 1950’s, physicists at the Lawrence Radiation Lab used the Beratron accelerator to produce the anti-proton. Upon examination of this particle they found that it had the same mass and spin as a proton, but with negative charge

  • The Canoe Race

    3885 Words  | 8 Pages

    to the lengths AB, BC and AC, throughout the investigation. It is more applicable to make assumptions; this would make the problem simpler. I will use the same assumptions for both the models. It is vital that we assume that the canoe is a particle and that it’s mass

  • The Effect of Insulation on the Rate of Cooling

    1796 Words  | 4 Pages

    In conduction the particles are joined together by bonds, when the material is heated the particles vibrate really fast, they have kinetic energy. A fairly still part in a cold part of the material can pick up vibration from an atom in a hot part of the metal. The energy is transferred from one particle to another very quickly. Soon particles from far away have more and more kinetic energy, heating the material. A good conductor is metal. In convection, particles in a fluid moves all

  • Soil Particle Size and Porosity

    1891 Words  | 4 Pages

    Soil Particle Size and Porosity Question: A comparison between two methods of investigating: What is the effect of changing particle size (i.e. the texture of soil) on the porosity of the soil? This is basically investigating in two different ways, "What is the effect of changing particle size (i.e. the texture of the soil) on the porosity of the soil?" The two different methods can then be compared. Predictions Porosity is the amount of air space in a soil. There are two types

  • Divinity, Sexuality and the Self in Whitman’s Song of Myself

    1237 Words  | 3 Pages

    Whitman begins his synthesis of the soul and body through sexuality by establishing a relative equality between the two.  He pronounces in previous stanzas, "You shall listen to all sides and filter them from yourself," and, "Not an inch nor a particle of a... ... middle of paper ... ...sp; By projecting his sexual self against such broad parameters, Whitman generates a decidedly transcendental experience.  With such vivid imagery in his celebration of the sensual, he elevates the limited

  • Electron Microscope

    857 Words  | 2 Pages

    much shorter than the wavelength of light. An electron is an elementary particle carrying a unit of charge of negative electricity. (CITE) J. J. Thompson discovered the electron in 1897 while showing what cathode rays were composed of. (CITE) The first time that the electron was used for a unit of negative electricity was in the late 19th century by the English physicist G. J. Stoney. The electron is the lightest particle having a non-zero rest mass. Electrons also have a wavelike property, which

  • An Integrative Approach to Teaching Writing

    1084 Words  | 3 Pages

    light on what kinds of thinking are behind these different emphases: A unit of experience can be viewed as a particle, or as a wave, or as a field. That is, the writer can choose to view any element of his experience as if it were static, or as if it were dynamic, or as if it were a network of relationships or a part of a larger network. Note carefully that a unit is not either a particle or a wave or a field, but rather can be viewed as all three. (Young, Becker and Pike 122) Thus, the way we

  • Body and Nature as Signifying System in Jane Smiley's A Thousand Acres

    776 Words  | 2 Pages

    taught me a lesson about what is below the level of the visible" (9). Nature, for Ginny, is understood by way of the intertwining of its and her body's past. She "was always aware [...] of the of the water in the soil, the way it travels from particle to particle", an awareness that eventually evolves into an understanding and identification. She reflects upon the millions of years and billions of "leaves, seeds, feathers, scales, flesh, bones, petals, pollen" (131) that constitute the soil they live

  • Essay On The Discovery Of The Electron

    510 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Discovery Of The Electron      The electron was discovered in 1895 by J.J. Thomson in the form of cathode rays, and was the first elementary particle to be identified. The electron is the lightest known particle which possesses an electric charge. Its rest mass is Me <approximately equal> 9.1 x 10 -28 g, about 1/1836 of the mass of the proton or neutron.      The charge of the electron is -e = -4.8 x 10^-10 esu <elec trostatic unit)

  • John Dalton

    635 Words  | 2 Pages

    conduct private research while still doing tutoring at 2 shillings a lesson. In 1802 John stated his law of partial pressures. When two elastic fluids are mixed together ( A and B) they dont repel each other. A particles do not repel B particles but a B particle will repel another B particle. One of his experiments involved the addition of water vapor to dry air. The increase in pressure was the same as the pressure of the added water. By doing this experiment, John established a relationship between

  • Rates of Reaction

    733 Words  | 2 Pages

    only occur when two different particles come together. The theory for the way the reaction occurs is called The Collision Theory. The collision theory states that that the different particles need to collide with each other in order to react. However, they do not react if they collide without sufficient energy, and therefore the more energy a particle has, the more likely it is to react. The activation energy is the minimum amount of energy required by a particle in order to react. When a

  • The Solar System

    4094 Words  | 9 Pages

    000° C; 27,000,000° F) and pressure (340 billion times Earth's air pressure at sea level) is so intense that nuclear reactions take place. This reaction causes four protons or hydrogen nuclei to fuse together to form one alpha particle or helium nucleus. The alpha particle is about .7 percent less massive than the four protons. The difference in mass is expelled as energy and is carried to the surface of the Sun, through a process known as convection, where it is released as light and heat. Energy

  • Investigating Factors that Affect the Rate of Reaction Between marble and Dilute Hydrochloric Acid

    1226 Words  | 3 Pages

    rate of reaction between marble (calcium carbonate) and dilute hydrochloric acid. There are three main factors that affect the rate of reaction. These are: Particle size Concentration Temperature With investigating any of these, there are slight problems which make them not as reliable as they could be. With particle size, it is extremely difficult to get control of the sizes, e.g. large, small, medium. I will not be investigating this as it is very unreliable. With concentration

  • The Effects of Concentration on Reaction Rate with Sodium Thiosulphate

    1224 Words  | 3 Pages

    water, I think the time for the cross to disappear would be faster than there would be with little sodium thiosulphate and more water – taking in account the amount of hydrochloric acid is the same. The reason why I think this is because the particles in the solution that will collide. There is a theory called the collision theory, and some of the factors from this, may affect the reaction rate in my experiment. The first factor is the concentration. The concentration rate is decided whether

  • Does Concentrated Acid or Diluted Acid React Faster?

    1441 Words  | 3 Pages

    concentration of the acid is increased, the rate goes faster. In a concentrated acid there are more particles in it this means that there is a more chance of successful collisions occurring. If the acid was diluted, there are not many acid particles, which means that there is not much chance of an acid particle hitting a magnesium atom. At the start, there are plenty of Magnesium atoms and acid particles but they get used up during successful collisions. After, a time there a fewer Magnesium atoms

  • Quarks

    594 Words  | 2 Pages

    Quarks Quarks- any group of subatomic particles believed to be among the basic components if matter Quarks are believed to be the fundamental constituents of matter, and have no apparent structure. They are the particles that make up protons and neutrons, which make up the nucleus of atoms. Also, particles that interact by means of the strong force, the force that holds parts of the nucleus together, are explained in terms of quarks. Other baryons are explained in terms of quarks(1985 Quarks).

  • Chaos and Literary Comparison

    1255 Words  | 3 Pages

    Chaos and Literary Comparison Abstract: I will show how chaos is can be found in art, specifically in literature, and analyze John Hawkes's Travesty to show the similarities between literature and chaos. John Hawkes describes the "artistic challenge" as conceiving the inconceivable. In accordance with that thought, Wallace Stevens says, "Imagination is the power that enables us to perceive the normal in the abnormal." It is arguable that chaos, deterministic disorder, is both abnormal