The Case For a Muon Collider Succeeding the LHC Just Got Stronger
StartsWithABang writes: If you strike the upper atmosphere with a cosmic ray, you produce a whole host of particles, including muons. Despite having a mean lifetime of just 2.2 microseconds, and the speed of light being 300,000 km/s, those muons can reach the ground! That's a distance of 100 kilometers traveled, despite a non-relativistic estimate of just 660 meters. If we apply that same principle to particle accelerators, we discover an amazing possibility: the ability to create a collider with the cleanliness and precision of electron-positron colliders but the high energies of proton colliders. All we need to do is build a muon collider. A pipe dream and the stuff of science fiction just 20 years ago, recent advances have this on the brink of becoming reality, with a legitimate possibility that a muon-antimuon collider will be the LHC's successor.
10,000 years of civilization and they're still just beating rocks together.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
It's a good idea to use muons. Especially after that article about a proton failure.
P.S. Where is the JOKE tag when you need one?
What is it with the metric ton of medium.com articles appearing recently? Their advertising and media presence team got awake and started mass-submitting stories to slashdot?
StartsWithABang submits them all but never comments. That account has submitted nine articles from medium.com this week alone. Funny that.
The supposed 'advance' was someone asking a question on the Internet. The answer was special relativity which we've had for 110 years.
When someone says, "Any fool can see
IAAAP (I am an accelerator physicist), and this is pretty old news. The US muon collider program is actually on its way out. Last year's Particle Physics Project Prioritization Panel (P5) advised the DOE to defund the muon collider project, redirecting funds toward the International Linear Collider (ILC)-- a 250GeV e+/e- precision Higgs factory-- and other projects:
http://science.energy.gov/~/media/hep/hepap/pdf/May%202014/FINAL_P5_Report_Interactive_060214.pdf
The DOE has followed P5's review, and Fermilab's muon collider project is winding down.