Deep beneath the border of France and Switzerland, the world's most massive physics machine is sending subatomic particles smashing into each other at speeds nearing the speed of light. Physicists ...
Researchers at Stanford University have developed a “quantum microphone” that’s sensitive enough to measure the individual particles of sound known as “phonons.” “We expect this device to allow new ...
Scientists working at the world's biggest particle smasher have turned the masses of data emitting from it into sound for the first time. More than 40million pieces of data are processed by the Large ...
Ever wonder what an atom might sound like, if you could tap it like a tuning fork? Wonder no more, scientists say; they report they've managed just such a "tap" and recorded the result. Researchers at ...
Who would have thought that the sound of God would be so whiney? Scientists working at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland say they have simulated the noise that might be made when a Higgs boson ...
Scientists have simulated the sounds set to be made by sub-atomic particles such as the Higgs boson when they are produced at the Large Hadron Collider. Their aim is to develop a means for physicists ...
The Langrangian sound particle model AKUMET is based on sound ray theory. A large number of sound particles is released at the source. The particles travel along curved sound rays and carry sound ...
The LHC Sound project aims to allow physicists at Cern in Geneva to ‘listen’ to the data in order to more easily identify the crucial ‘Higgs boson’ particle. Finding the Higgs boson – also known as ...
In recent decades, major technological revolutions have transformed our society and daily lives. Their remarkable innovations have been based primarily on our improved ability to manipulate two ...
As I stare down this blank page, I must admit that I feel somewhat like a novice climber staring up into the sky to see the peak of Everest appear within the heavens. How does one go about explaining ...
1. Terra Firma, Terra Incognita (Hofbauer) - 7:45; 2. Variable Density #1 (Succi/Swell/Matsuki) - 2:18; 3. Fanfare For Wisdom (Fewell) - 6:29; 4. Requiem for a Consequence (Fewell) - 9:45; 5. Afro ...