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Message 37293 - Posted: 9 Nov 2018, 22:32:23 UTC

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Jim1348

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Message 41100 - Posted: 28 Dec 2019, 15:24:13 UTC - in response to Message 37293.  

“Finding new physics is more challenging than we expected it to be,” says University of Wisconsin physicist Tulika Bose of the CMS experiment. “Challenging situations make people come up with clever ideas.”

One idea is that maybe scientists have been so focused on instantly decaying particles that they’ve been missing a whole host of particles that can travel up to several meters before falling apart. This would look like a firework exploding randomly in one of the detector subsystems.

Scientists are rethinking how they reconstruct the data as a way to cast a bigger net and potentially catch particles with signatures like these. “If we only used our standard analysis methods, we would definitely not be sensitive to anything like this,” Bose says. “We’re no longer just reloading previous analyses but exploring innovative ideas.”

https://www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/the-unseen-progress-of-the-lhc

I think I will throw a few more cores at CMS.
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Message boards : LHC@home Science : CMS Detector


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