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ATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holes
In some theories, microscopic black holes may be produced in particle collisions that occur when very-high-energy cosmic rays hit particles in our atmosphere. These microscopic-black-holes would decay into ordinary particles in a tiny fraction of a second and would be very difficult to observe in ou...
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2014
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1696938 |
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author | ATLAS, Experiment |
author_facet | ATLAS, Experiment |
author_sort | ATLAS, Experiment |
collection | CERN |
description | In some theories, microscopic black holes may be produced in particle collisions that occur when very-high-energy cosmic rays hit particles in our atmosphere. These microscopic-black-holes would decay into ordinary particles in a tiny fraction of a second and would be very difficult to observe in our atmosphere. The ATLAS Experiment offers the exciting possibility to study them in the lab (if they exist). The simulated collision event shown is viewed along the beampipe. The event is one in which a microscopic-black-hole was produced in the collision of two protons (not shown). The microscopic-black-hole decayed immediately into many particles. The colors of the tracks show different types of particles emerging from the collision (at the center). |
id | cern-1696938 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
publishDate | 2014 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-16969382022-11-03T11:28:38Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1696938ATLAS, ExperimentATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holesATLASIn some theories, microscopic black holes may be produced in particle collisions that occur when very-high-energy cosmic rays hit particles in our atmosphere. These microscopic-black-holes would decay into ordinary particles in a tiny fraction of a second and would be very difficult to observe in our atmosphere. The ATLAS Experiment offers the exciting possibility to study them in the lab (if they exist). The simulated collision event shown is viewed along the beampipe. The event is one in which a microscopic-black-hole was produced in the collision of two protons (not shown). The microscopic-black-hole decayed immediately into many particles. The colors of the tracks show different types of particles emerging from the collision (at the center).ATLAS-PHO-EVENTS-2014-005oai:cds.cern.ch:16969382014 |
spellingShingle | ATLAS ATLAS, Experiment ATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holes |
title | ATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holes |
title_full | ATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holes |
title_fullStr | ATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holes |
title_full_unstemmed | ATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holes |
title_short | ATLAS simulated event display: microscopic black holes |
title_sort | atlas simulated event display: microscopic black holes |
topic | ATLAS |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1696938 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT atlasexperiment atlassimulatedeventdisplaymicroscopicblackholes |