An April Fools collision for CMS?
February 10, 2010 | 12:39 pm
This story first appeared in Fermilab Today on February 10, 2010.
When Jim Freeman needed to set the countdown clock at Fermilab’s LHC Physics Center to predict the exact date and time the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment will get its first high-energy collisions, he turned to a tried and true scientific method: create a contest.
He sent a call out to US CMS collaboration members and asked for their estimates as to when CMS will get its first 3.5 -on 3.5-TeV collisions. He requested specific dates and times using the time in Geneva, Switzerland. The results are in.
Around 55 collaboration members submitted guesses, yielding a noticeable peak on April 1. “Other than that, it’s a pretty ‘physics’ looking distribution,” Freeman said.
Will April Fool’s Day throw everyone for a loop this year? Stay tuned….

A plot shows the distribution of predictions of when the first high-energy collisions will take place at CMS.
Elizabeth Clements
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2 Comments »




February 12th, 2010 at 6:39 am
Well nice way to fooling out people on April fool day. And I am really curious to know what happen next. I”ll surely stay tuned with you.
February 13th, 2010 at 2:41 pm
I seriously hope it doesn’t happen on that day. Just imagine that number of “Higgs Found!” pranks that would be circulating the web. Or maybe even “Black Holes Destroy CERN” — and imagine that one in bigger and bolder font.