LHC Goes Open Access

September 17, 2008 | 9:18 am

As noted elsewhere, Elsevier has recently announced that:

Initial experimental results submitted to Physics Letters B and Nuclear Physics B by the LHC experiments will be made available through Elsevier’s sponsored access option at no cost to the experiments.

About one year ago Springer made a similar statement, extended to all HEP experimental papers, announcing

…all experimental papers submitted to and accepted by The European Physical Journal C - Particles and Fields will be published with full, online open access without any fees being incurred by the authors.

These moves by Elsevier and Springer mean that the peer-reviewed papers will not only be available for any and all parties to read, but that neither the authors nor their institutions will need to pay for this Open Access.

Of course, these sorts of donations to the HEP community (Elsevier and Springer incur very real costs to review, edit, and publish these papers, which they are here donating to the community) can be seen as a marketing ploy, designed to attract the goodwill of the HEP community and, with it, several of what one surely expects to be notable, highly-cited articles in the field.

However, the interesting bit is not that Elsevier and Springer might attempt to obtain high-quality articles for their journal, after all, that is their responsibility to their shareholders. Indeed the interesting thing here is that they feel that providing Open Access for LHC papers will actually attract LHC papers. Remember that authors in HEP pay essentially no fees in any of the primary journals in which they publish, so they do not really have a direct incentive to publish Open Access. Why then would a publisher (and indeed clearly smart ones like Elsevier and Springer) feel that providing Open Access for free would be a selling point?

Indeed this is the real story behind this action: that Elsevier are responding to new forces in the market for scholarly publishing. The rise of Open Access movements in general, and SCOAP3 within HEP, are a sign that the scientific community is starting to ask for more control over the dissemination of their work. Researchers are increasingly asking for journals that fit their mode of discourse, rather than journals that are bound to traditional ways that might not fit their optimal working style.

In addition the LHC experiments have made clear statements that they will publish their articles under Open Access conditions, and, as reported in symmetry, chose to publish key papers about the construction of their experiments as Open Access in JINST.  These publishers appear to think that Open Access is something researchers want, and that providing it will get them a leg up in the marketplace.

The real story is that researchers, librarians, and other Open Access advocates have changed the rules of the game, so that not only does the world’s largest scientific publisher feel that giving away articles free is good business, but they are probably right.

Travis Brooks

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Presidential candidates answer science questions

September 16, 2008 | 4:50 pm

John McCain joined Barack Obama and responded to a series of questions about science, energy, and health policies. McCain responded Monday, and Obama responded in late August, shortly before symmetry made its original post on this topic.

The candidate’s answers are posted on the website Science Debate 2008 as well as the website for Scientists and Engineers for America. Science Debate 2008 compiled “the top 14 [science] questions the candidates should answer” based on a nation-wide survey of 38,000 people. The site offers lists of related articles, including this one from the New York Times. The SEA website includes Obama’s and McCain’s “Record on Science,” which is a list of documented statements or press releases that the candidates have made in the past few months concerning science related policies.

Calla Cofield

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Projects in SPIRES land

September 16, 2008 | 8:05 am

As I’ve written here before, I’m pretty busy these days working on INSPIRE, the system that will revamp and replace SPIRES. My colleagues at CERN, DESY, and Fermilab are also working hard to build something new and useful for the HEP community, while continuing to provide the SPIRES service, and in fact I’m writing this post from CERN, where many of us involved in INSPIRE are meeting to work on the project and get some good code written.

I’ve also written about SLAC’s involvement in SCOAP3, which is a separate project, but also aimed at maintaining the high-quality of literature in the community. Many of us involved in INSPIRE are also supporters of SCOAP3’s goal of Open Access to the peer-reviewed literature of HEP, and several of my colleagues are quite busy in this regard as well.

In the midst of all this work, my friend and colleague at the DESY library, Annette Holtkamp, somehow found time in to give an interview to a journalist about these projects that she’s working on. The interview is very detailed and presents a really nice overview of both INSPIRE and SCOAP3. Since I am also involved in these projects, I was quite happy to see such a nice summary of what I’ve been working on this last year, reminding me what I have done, where I want to go, and why.

Travis Brooks

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Student journalists and the LHC

September 15, 2008 | 6:43 am

Tired of reading traditional media stories about the Large Hadron Collider at CERN preparing to switch on Sept. 10, but still crave more information about arguably the biggest science venture in decades?

No problem.

You can get a fresh, Millennial perspective on the ramp up of the world’s biggest and most powerful particle accelerator at http://www.lhcscience.org/journalists/.

The Web site showcases short documentaries about the LHC made by six groups of American teens from Utah, Texas, New York, Minnesot,a and Florida who spent a week at CERN in April capturing the excitement and long hours that come with preparing to revolutionize particle physics. More than 10,000 people from 80 countries worked during the last two decades to design, build, and test the LHC.

The documentaries aim to make the science accessible to youth through interviews with physicists, a glimpse at CERN’s open house days, and footage of the cathedral-sized machinery and four underground caverns need to house six experiments. The United States plays a strong role in the two largest, general-purpose detector experiments, CMS and ATLAS.

The US Department of Energy’s Office of Science and the National Science Foundation funded the documentaries.

Tona Kunz

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The LHC start up party in San Francisco

September 12, 2008 | 1:19 pm

More than 200 physicists from the San Francisco Bay Area (and beyond) gathered at swissnex in San Francisco to celebrate the successful first beam circulation at the Large Hadron Collider.

Alexis Madrigal from Wired.com was there and he made a very cool video asking physicists about their hopes for the collider. The video reflects well the excitement in the room and the general buzz about the start up. See if you can pick from states of tiredness alone who was up all night watching the startup live the night before!

David Harris

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Partying in pajamas

September 12, 2008 | 9:05 am

To watch and celebrate the start up of the LHC earlier this week, Fermilab staff, scientists, media and local physics enthusiasts gathered at the laboratory Wednesday morning for a Pajama Party, an aptly named middle-of-the-night event. While not everyone took the pajama part seriously, there were about 100 people who showed up in their sleepwear.

Fermilab staff captured some photos of pj party attendees in their slumber gear–everything from animal print to the full-footy pajama. Some highlights are below.

Fermilab Deputy Director Young-Kee Kim poses in her red footy pajamas with CMS scientist Joel Butler, accelerator scientist Joe Lykken (in silk robe) and CMS scientist Lothar Bauerdick (in full robe and pajamas at right).

Fermilab Deputy Director Young-Kee Kim poses in her red footy pajamas with scientists Joel Butler, Joe Lykken (in silk robe) and Lothar Bauerdick (in full robe and pajamas at right).

Read the rest of this entry »

Rhianna Wisniewski

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Who loves the LHC? Paris Hilton does…

September 11, 2008 | 5:43 pm

Or so says an English publication.

But then again what doesn’t Paris Hilton love?

We’ll look forward to any upcoming videos from Paris turning on the LHC, although we didn’t observe her at the big event on Wednesday.

This isn’t the first time the lowbrow and highbrow have collided in the realm of particle physics. The Onion, America’s favorite current-event parody magazine, targeted President George W. Bush and Fermilab. And California Institute of Technology physicists. And superconducting collider technology.

Who says basic research isn’t funny?

Oh yeah, The Spoof commented on that also.

Tona Kunz

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Monitoring the end of the world

September 11, 2008 | 10:33 am

Colleagues around the labs found this helpful site to keep you up-to-date on rumors of your impending demise. It is a status page to let people know if the LHC has destroyed the world yet:

http://www.hasthelargehadroncolliderdestroyedtheworldyet.com/

Note that this site features an atom feed so, if you don’t have time to continually check the Web page, you can be alerted of the earth’s demise via your favorite reader.
http://www.hasthelargehadroncolliderdestroyedtheworldyet.com/atom.xml

And if you would like to know exactly how long you have been alive since your number was supposed to be up, check out this world didn’t end countdown clock at: http://blogs.discovery.com/space_disco/2008/09/post.html

Tona Kunz

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Will particle physics rapper alpinekat get a record deal?

September 11, 2008 | 5:00 am

Katie McAlpine, aka AlpineKat

Katie McAlpine, aka alpinekat

Your guess is as good as ours. But according to InTrade, which bills itself as the world’s leading  prediction market, the chance that the overnight YouTube sensation will ink a deal (as they say in Variety) is 13 percent.

alpinekat is the nom de blog of science communicator Katie McAlpine, who graduated last year from Michigan State University and has been working at CERN, the European particle physics lab near Geneva where the Large Hadron Collider officially opened for business on Wednesday.  Her Large Hadron Rap video, with its catchy hook (”The LHC accelerates the protons and the lead, and the things it will discover will rock you in the head!”),  has got more than 2 million views on YouTube, and is #1 on a list of Top 10 Amazing Physics Videos that Wired magazine put up over the weekend.

So what is a prediction market, you may ask, and how did InTrade come up with 13 percent? Prediction markets are essentially a way of harnessing the wisdom of crowds to predict what will happen in some specific area–say, the next Presidential election.  They’re thought to be more accurate in forecasting the future than surveys or polls, because traders place bets on what they think will actually happen, rather than on the outcome they prefer. (For the academically minded, here’s an review of the concept from the Journal of Economic Perspectives by Justin Wolfers and Eric Zitzewitz of the Stanford University Graduate School of Business.) On InTrade, participants buy and sell shares in various contracts, each focused on a single outcome; yesterday, for instance, there was active trading on the question of whether John McCain will win the presidential election (51 percent chance), Osama bin Laden will be captured or neutralized by the end of this year (12 percent), and Hurricane Ike will first hit the United States in Louisiana as a Category Two storm or higher (7.9 percent).

I’m going to go way out on a limb here and predict that another particle physics blogger will NO WAY get a record contract. That would be US LHC blogger Steve Nahn, who in honor of Wednesday’s first beam event gamely sings “The Protons in the Ring Go Round and Round.” He writes, “If Katie can do it, so can I,” adding:

  • Who says scientists cannot be completely ridiculous?
  • I believe I should put off that career in music and stick with my day job
  • I attempted to get a more friendly performer, but was refused–although it might cost him some allowance
  • There was some breakfast table discussion about what detrimental effects this may have on my career, but if you don’t take risks, you’ll never really live, right?

It’s great to see physics bring out peoples’ wild, creative sides!

Glennda Chui

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Video of Fermilab's LHC pajama party

September 10, 2008 | 12:40 pm

Fermilab Director Pierre Odonne, in footie pajamas, chats with communications director Judy Jackson during the Large Hadron Collider's first beam launch in Fermilab's Wilson Hall.

From the Beacon News photo gallery: Fermilab Director Pierre Oddone, in footie pajamas, chats with communications director Judy Jackson at the LHC pajama party in Fermilab's Wilson Hall.

Here’s a video of last night’s event celebrating the first beam through the Large Hadron Collider. (Ignore what’s playing at the top of the screen and look for the link to “Fermilab pajama party” below.) The video was shot by Andre Salles of the Beacon News in Aurora, Ill. His story is here, along with a photo gallery. The photo at right is from the gallery; it was shot by Sebastian Szyszka/Special to Sun-Times News Group.

Glennda Chui

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