Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Saturday, July 7, 2012

The Higgs Boson Found. A Major Scientific Breakthrough



Hello Troops,

You may have overhead people on the news talking about a hugh discovery made at the CERN underground atom smasher complex spanning the border between Switzerland and France.  The CERN scientists say they are 99% sure they've found one of science's Holy Grails - the Higgs Boson particle.

"So What?" I hear you thinking.  You've got other things on your mind, like when are you going to get to go to the Space Center again.  While I applaud your priorities, I urge you to take a moment to applaud the work done at CERN and understand the significance to you and the world.

What is the Higgs Boson you ask?  I turn to Nick Collins, The Telegraph's Science Correspondent to help answer your question 

What is the Higgs boson and the Higgs field?
The Higgs field has been described as a kind of cosmic "syrup" spread through the universe.
According to Prof Higgs's 1964 theory, the field interacts with the tiny particles that make up atoms, and weighs them down so that they do not simply whizz around space at the speed of light.
But in the half-century following the theory, produced independently by the six scientists within a few months of each other, nobody has been able to prove that the Higgs Field really exists.
So, we are talking about a field of energy surrounding everything in the universe.
Subatomic particles slow down from light speed as they move through the field.  This drag gives them mass.  Mass leads to attraction (they're moving slow enough to get a good look at each other and 'hook up'. The particles start clumping together forming atomic neutrons, protons and electrons which in turn form atoms which in turn form molecules which in turn make matter and US.

Nick Collins continues...
 
What would the world be like without the Higgs boson?
According to the Standard Model theory, it would not be recognisable. Without something to give mass to the basic building blocks of matter, everything would behave as light does, floating freely and not combining with other particles. Ordinary matter, as we know it, would not exist.


How long has the search gone on?
Scientists have been looking for the Higgs since the 1960s, but the search began in earnest more than 20 years ago with early experiments at Cern in Europe and Fermilab in the US.

Does finding the Higgs boson mark the end of the search?
It's just the end of the beginning. Confirming the existence of the Higgs would only be the start of a new era of particle physics as scientists focus on understanding how it works and look for unexpected phenomena.

How do you find a Higgs boson?
To find the particle and characterise it, scientists must first try to create it by smashing beams of protons together inside the Large Hadron Collider at close to the speed of light and analysing the debris.
By doing so they will essentially be recreating a very small model of the state of the Universe as it was in the first trillionth of a second after the Big Bang.
Some of the fragments released by the collision should in theory be Higgs Bosons, although they will instantly deteriorate into even smaller, more stable subatomic particles.
Like other heavy particles, the Higgs decays into lighter particles, which then decay into even lighter ones. The process can follow a certain number of paths, which depend on the particle's mass.
Physicists compare the decay paths they observe after a particle collision to predicted decay paths simulated with computers. When a match is found, it suggests that the observed particle is the one being searched for.

How is the Higgs boson related to the Big Bang?
About 13.7 billion years ago, the Big Bang gave birth to the universe and caused an outburst of massless particles and radiation energy. Scientists think that fractions of a second later, part of the radiation energy congealed into the Higgs field.
When the universe began to cool, particles acquired mass from the Higgs field, slowed down and began to bunch up to form composite particles and, eventually, atoms.
Conditions present a billionth of a second after the Big Bang are recreated in the Large Hadron Collider particle accelerator near Geneva.

Expedition 31 Returns to Earth

 

Expedition 31 crew members prepare to close the hatch.

Just after midnight on Sunday July 1st, the three members of the 31st expedition to the International Space Station undocked their Soyuz TMA-03M spacecraft and headed for home. Expedition commander Oleg Kononenko, and flight engineers Don Petite and Andre Kuipers had been in space for about 6 months. Later on Sunday, the spacecraft made its final deorbit burn and re-entered the atmosphere. Under parachute, the crew touched down in Kazakhstan on Sunday afternoon.

The Soyuz spacecraft moves away from the ISS.

Great view of the Soyuz from above the Earth.

Russian view of descending crew capsule. Several Mi-8 helicopters circled the capsule as it approached the landing site.


Thrusters fired just before landing to slow the capsule for a softer landing. Touchdown!

With the end of Expedition 31, the remaining crew on the ISS now take over command and begin Expedition 32. Cosmonaut Gennady Pedalka leads the expedition, and marks his 3rd command of the ISS! He is accompanied by Flight engineers Joe Acaba (NASA) and Sergei Revin (Russia). The second half of the crew will arrive on July 17.

Mark Daymont
Space Center Educator

Friday, July 6, 2012

Thursday, and the Super Overnight Camp with The Imaginarium


Flight Director Ben during the Leadership Camp
A Quiet Place in front of the Library Door.


Hello Troops,

It is 11:07 P.M. Thursday night.  We are in the thick of a Super Overnight Camp.  Twelve campers are maneuvering deeper and deeper into the plot of Mercy Strike.  The hallways are darkened and staff and volunteers are spread up and down the length of the school waiting for the crew to beam out of the Voyager and into the alien set - a Romulan prison camp.


The Voyager's Staff during the Leadership Camp.
You see what happens when I turn my back for an instant?
Pandemonium, Anarchy and the Breakdown of Civil Society!


The Space Center was closed Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday to celebrate Independence Day.  The Leadership Camp was brutal on the staff.  The break was well deserved.  Supposedly we are rested and ready for the big push to finish the summer season on July 31.  Three Edventure Camps, two Day Camps, several Overnight Camps, one Super Overnight Camp and a slew of private parties can be seen emerging from the dark in the light from our headlights.  Its a tough schedule.  I wonder what I was thinking when I set it up last February.

One of the campers, a Mr. Flynn, just walked by.  I believe he just returned from the Galileo on some side trip - a subplot complimenting the primary storyline.

A real treat!  I saw the Red Blemish, the Space Center's very own failed superhero, in the school's hallway.  His bright red, nearly floor length trench coat gave him away.  What brings The Red Blemish to our humble school this evening?

He just walked by my desk.  My presence wasn't noticed.  He was focused on something.  Perhaps "M, The Destroyer of Worlds" lurks in the darkened halls, waiting to ensnare our campers.  We will know within the next few minutes.  The landing party is about to begin.

It will be a long night.  The campers won't go to bed until 2:00 A.M.

The Red Blemish walked by again.  He looks perplexed.  Maybe his scooter is out of gas.  A black streak runs down his left cheek.
"Black tears?" I asked.
"A scar," he replied.
"M, The Destroyer of Worlds?" I questioned.
He didn't hear me and disappeared through the office's door.

It's 11:38 P.M. Bracken kicked me out of the office so the Voyager's crew could beam down to the Romulan base without seeming me.  It's getting too dangerous to stay here.  I think I'll creep through the hall to the Library and hide out for spell while the brave crew of the Voyager battle the foes of liberty and galactic human rights.

"The funniest thing is happening in the Kindergarten room," Bracken said.  "Andrew is playing the Romulan Ambassador locked in a cell opposite the Voyager's Ambassador.  Andrew is telling the Ambassador Romulan jokes and he isn't getting them.  The Voyager's Ambassador is telling Andrew human jokes and Andrew is pretending not to get them either.  Its the funniest cross cultural exchange and I'm taking full credit for the idea!"

"Great Idea Bracken," I said.

"Thanks, I needed that," he replied as he disappeared through the Voyager's spinning black door leading to the stage.  

Bracken deserves a pat on the back for spearhead this week's Super Overnight Camp.    

There are a few things I'd like to share from the Imaginarium to top off the post...   



 There is a lot to be said for choosing the right time and place to be clueless



OK, a real test of your sweet tooth.  Can you name them all just on appearance?



We try to make our simulators Kid Proof and they keep making better kids.
Maintenance is a real pain with the use and abuse our ships endure.



True imagination means pushing the boundary.
Uncharted water can be dangerous, but therein lies the Joy in Journey.


Now What?


Freedom isn't free.



And what about those inertia dampeners?  
How can they cancel inertia when the ship jumps to hyperspeed but
not cancel the effects of a simple torpedo impact?
Plot Hole?


Neither are Space Center Directors....



Interesting
I'll continue to use plastic cutlery but
Interesting nevertheless.


Amen.


Steampunked Stormtroopers


What caught your eye?


What caught your eye?
The same, yet different in both pictures.
You can live in the world and be one of billions and still be yourself.
Stand out for the right reasons.


 I admire the Doctor.
Thank the BBC for catering to the more intelligent of the masses.
(Yes, that means if you like Dr. Who, you must be more intelligent than your 
average human.  I think its a proven fact).


Pay to have Grandma flown home or be creative.


And Finally
The Truth in Name Brands