homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Get the latest LHC details via a phone app

A whole lot of people have been closely following the developments at the Large Hadron Collider, but now, all that may become a whole lot easier, thanks to an Android based application which allows users to see the latest colliding protons, among others, at the world’s largest particle accelerator, located at the French/Swiss border. LHSee, […]

Mihai Andrei
October 10, 2011 @ 9:39 am

share Share

A whole lot of people have been closely following the developments at the Large Hadron Collider, but now, all that may become a whole lot easier, thanks to an Android based application which allows users to see the latest colliding protons, among others, at the world’s largest particle accelerator, located at the French/Swiss border.

LHSee, the new Android application (get it here), allows aspiring physicists and science afficionados to see particle collisions in real time and in 3D, hunt for (so far) theoretical particles, and even learn how the LHC works!

The app was developed by Alan Barr, from the Oxford University, but it was supported and endorsed by CERN itself, under which the LHC functions. According to them, it has already been downloaded 10.000 times! Hey, maybe there’s hope for the world after all!

According to developers, the app is aimed at ‘experts and non-experts alike’, as it offers the chance to explore different parts of the detector and learn about the reactions the scientists there are looking for.

“For ages, I’d been thinking that with the amazing capabilities on modern smartphones we really ought to be able to make a really great app – something that would allow everybody to access the LHC data,” said Barr, on the official Oxford science blog.

It is certainly an initiative worth applauding, and hopefully, other scientific programs will take this example, and soon enough, we could keep in touch with developments from the entire scientific world, directly on our phones.

I’d sounded out a few commercial companies who said they could do the job but I found that it would be expensive, and of course I’d have to teach their designers a lot of physics. So the idea was shelved,” continued Barr, “Then, a few months later, I had one of those eureka moments that make Oxford so wonderful.”

So, even if you’re a physics newbie or a hardcore particle physics fan – you can take something form this application; even more, it has full support in English, French, German, Italian, Spanish and Swedish, as well as videos from CERN, an animated step-by-step walkthrough of how the LHC works and 3D simulations of real collisions. If you’re feeling more adventurous, there’s even a game called ‘The hunt for the Higgs Boson’ – a game a lot of the scientific community is playing, actually.

share Share

This Tiny Nuclear Battery Could Last for Thousands of Years Without Charging

The radiocarbon battery is supposed to be safe for everyday operations.

Physicists just explained why the pop of a beer bottle sounds so perfect

A high-speed peek into what really happens when your beer bottle goes “pop.”

Physicists Think They've Found a Way to Harvest Energy from Earth's Rotation — And It Might Be Just Crazy Enough to Work

A wacky-looking hollow device is giving perpetual motion machine vibes.

Did WWI Dazzle Camouflage Actually Work? Scientists Revisit a 105-Year-Old Experiment to Find Out

Painting ships like zebras was a bold move, but it likely didn't fool U-boats. Something else worked though.

New Organic Semiconductor That Spirals Electrons Like a Corkscrew Could Lead to Brighter, More Energy-Efficient Screens

The technology could be applied to not just screens but also quantum computing and spintronics.

Black Holes Might Not Be Cosmic Dead-Ends But Rather the Beginning Of White Holes

From black holes to white holes. Who would've thought?

Physicist Claims Gravity Might Emerge From Entropy. Could This Unite Quantum Mechanics and Gravity?

A novel theory could finally bridge the gap between quantum physics and general relativity.

Physicists Say Time's Arrow Could Move in Two Directions at Once

The Universe doesn't care which direction time flows in.

What would happen if a (small) black hole passed through your body?

Imagine a supervillain attacking you with his unique superpower of creating small black holes. An invisible force zips through your body at unimaginable speed. You feel no push, no heat, yet, deep inside your body, atoms momentarily shift in response to the gravitational pull of something tiny yet immensely dense — a primordial black hole […]

This Carbon-14 Radioactive Diamond Battery Could Last Longer Than Human Civilization

A tiny diamond battery could power devices for thousands of years.