Thursday, September 11, 2008

The Universe and Everything

This week marks the lighting of the fire (as it were) under the Large Hadron Collider on the border between France and Switzerland. I have mixed feelings about this event for several reasons.

First of all, it could have been us, here in North Texas, whacking atoms together and discovering all manner of stuff about the origins of the universe. Back in the 90s, the Super-conducting Super Collider was being built just south of Dallas (in the town of Waxahachie, which, rather ironically, sports even more nineteenth-century houses than McKinney does). But the gummint (the Clinton administration and Congress, to be specific) pulled the plug when it looked like the budget would exceed 12 billion bucks. (Now that's an earmark. But I'm not convinced it was pork.)

In one sense, this is one more example of how short-sighted we tend to be as a nation, and one of the problems with the kind of immediate-results capitalism we practice. If it's not going to show a profit in six months, we ain't doin' it. Long-term investment is for old fogeys and ivory tower intellectuals. Bring on the day-traders and the stock-market gamblers (and the sub-prime mortgage racketeers), but don't invest in the future unless somebody guarantees that it will lead to big bucks, real soon. Don't ever do anything purely for the sake of science or understanding.

Of course, we don't teach science properly in schools, either, which is why we couldn't get anybody fired up about the Collider and its potential for answering all manner of questions about the beginnings of life, the universe, and everything (the answers probably being somewhat more complex than "42"). I'm pretty sure I'm the only person I know with a picture of the guts of the LHC displayed on my desktop as wallpaper. And I really don't know squat about physics.

But I know enough to maintain some trust that these guys know what they're doing. I hung around with a number of Nobel-prize-winner-spawn at Penn (in addition to the fact that my former father-in-law edited Physical Review Letters and I saw a lot of high-powered physicists in action), and these guys knew their stuff. They were, even back in the seventies, talking about what we might learn from developing an instrument that could smack particles together at enormous speeds and create--what?

Here was the problem, to me: uncertainty. And I don't mean in Heisenberg's sense. I mean in the sense of "are we really wise enough to pull this off without destroying life as we know it?" Human beings are capable of magnificent flashes of intellectual power; but we can also be almost irretrievably stupid. We are capable of inventing all manner of ways to heal the sick, but we also have more ways of killing each other off than are necessary by any stretch of the imagination. So how do we know that these guys--who are now running atoms around a racetrack in order to make them collide at impossible speeds--know what they're doing?

Well, we don't. But I, for one, trust them. I don't equate this with faith, because faith doesn't require evidence, just belief. I don't believe that the LHC physicists and engineers know what they're doing; I simply trust them on the basis of their academic and professional credentials. Not only that, there are about 80 countries involved in the development of these projects--indicating that we're perfectly capable of working together to answer important, fundamental questions.

Perhaps I'm willing to cut them some slack (I am, after all, known for my critical stance regarding most technologies) because what they're doing is just so bloody cool. As a life-long science fiction buff, I've always been disappointed that we've done so little about getting out and exploring the universe. But now we're doing that--right here on Planet Earth.

If what's going on is unclear, I highly recommend the short video available on the CERN website, which focuses on the ALICE experiment now being undertaken. A longer film featuring physicist Brian Cox (with only one accent to deal with) is available from TED. Also recommended: an article from Seed magazine on "Why a Large Hadron Collider?" The irrepressible Stephen Hawking also talks about the project on BBC--and I have little trouble feeling comfortable with his assessments, since he's probably the smartest guy on the planet.

A couple of good blogs to look at for debunking predictions of catastrophe and dispelling fears of the apocalypse: New Scientist's Short Sharp Blog entry, and this one from The Biologista.

For the naysayers who are still afraid of doomsday, you can check in at this website for reassurance: http://www.hasthelhcdestroyedtheearth.com/

This morning, once again, I woke up in the known universe; so things seem to be going well so far.

September 27 update: Well, things haven't gone as well as expected. CERN announced on September 18 that the LHC would be offline for the rest of the year, due to electrical problems. For the full story see this article in Wired online.

Photo: The CMS silicon tracking detector, which measures the three-dimensional positions of charged particles as they travel through it, allowing measurement of their momentum; a diagram of the major experiments. Both courtesy CERN.

7 comments:

krimzon11 said...

Cool post! I heard about this thing a while ago here, and it got me excited about what could be in store for science & technology. Then sometime in-between now & then I saw a show on Discovery about the LHC and how it was built, and I was absolutely amazed at the scale of it. I must admit your last link in this article brought tears to my eyes from laughing so hard. I'm excited to see what happens with all this atom-smashing business.

Owlfarmer said...

The article that Krimzon points to here is about the impact of the new Grid system that will make today's internet seem as obsolete tomorrow as the early net does today. In order to interpret the data coming out of the LHC experiments, the consortium has had to create an infrastructure of linked computers that can handle the power necessary to help them (and us) understand what's going on. For more information on the Grid, its origins, and its future promise, visit the Grid Cafe: http://gridcafe.web.cern.ch/gridcafe/GridatCERN/gridatcern.html

Thanks for the comment, JB--you're keeping me on the stick!

Unknown said...

You were saying you didn't know quite too much about what the LHC does with the whole ramming particles together business.

Well part of what they're trying to find is dark matter. Pretty much 96% of the universe is said to be made up of dark matter and dark energy but we still don't know too much about it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:DarkMatterPie.jpg

Wiki link I know but I heard about it on the science channel and the wiki facts line up with what they said.

Well hope that sheds some light for ya.

Owlfarmer said...

I actually know more than I let on, but thanks for the link, Nathan. Dark matter is one of my favorite puzzles, and even though I'm not a math or physics guy, the fact that there are good populizers out there helps.

Margaret said...

Great post! I'm not scared either. I especially enjoyed the first part you wrote, about how if research "doesn't turn a profit in 6 months, we aren't interested". I'm afraid this is true in Canada as well, though it might be a little better here. I'm constantly bemused by articles in the newspaper that make fun of research projects that are supposedly wasting Canadian taxpayers money. The idea is that if research can be made to sound funny or useless, than it must be, ipso facto, pointless to invest in. As someone who's written grants, I know how frustrating this is! People think most research projects are stupid until they become useful to THEM.

Ah well, c'est la vie!

deadchris said...

The LHC is an amazing piece of tech.
I had heard about this work a few years back while in high school thanks to a teacher who actually cared to educate. Not say you don't, you do a great job at that. The night before it was activated there was an interesting segment on the History channel about the LHC. When I heard it could produce a black hole that could just kill us all, I was worried but after looking up on it and seeing that program I felt relieved that we, most likely, won't die.

The last link you posted was funny, gave me a nice laugh. I do hope that this massive experiment is successful and we learn more about whats out there.

Science is such a wonderful thing.

-Chris Sanchez

Owlfarmer said...

It's encouraging to see how interested some folks still seem to be in science, even in a world that appears to be decreasingly interested in anything vaguely intellectual. I'm encouraged by the fact that my students find this enterprise worth paying attention to--and that perhaps our norther neighbors are somewhat more enlightened than we are in this regard. I'd encourage anyone who wants to be kept in touch with what's going on in the science world to subscribe to New Scientist online at newscientist.com. The basic service is free, and timely updates appear in your mail box to keep you abreast of the very latest.