Annonce

Café & Kosmos 8 October 2013

Particle accelerators: the next generation

7 octobre 2013

With Drs Jan Machacek & Karl Rieger, Max Planck Institute for Physics

The particle accelerators used for research in high-energy physics are among the largest and most expensive scientific instruments ever built. They are like giant microscopes that have allowed us to discover the fundamental laws of the Universe —from the Big Bang, to the Standard Model of particle physics, and even to the actual structure of the cosmos.

In order to continue exploring new areas of physics with particle accelerators, scientists are now investigating new ways to make them not only more powerful, but also smaller. In the very promising plasma wakefield accelerators, "wake waves" are generated in an ionised gas (plasma). Electrons and positrons, their antiparticles, can “surf” that wake and be accelerated to speeds corresponding to over 1000 times the energy that they could get from current particle accelerators. The final aim is to reduce the distance required for to accelerate the particles, leading to much smaller— and cheaper — accelerators.

What: The next generation of particle accelerators
When: Tuesday, 8 October 2013, 19:00 until approximately 20:30
Where: Vereinsheim, Occamstr. 8, 80802 Munich, near Münchener Freiheit

Please note that the Café & Kosmos events take place in German.

Admission is free.

Liens

Contacts

Olivier Hainaut
ESO
Karl Schwarzschildstr. 2
85748 Garching bei München
Tel: +49 89 3200 6752
Email: ohainaut@eso.org

Dr. Hannelore Hämmerle
MPI für extraterrestrische Physik
MPI für Astrophysik
Giessenbachstraße
85748 Garching
Tel: +49 (89) 30 000 3980
Email: hannelore.haemmerle@mpe.mpg.de

À propos de l'annonce

Identification:ann13079

Images

Café & Kosmos 8 October 2013
Café & Kosmos 8 October 2013