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定格动画001train time laspe from Chen XU on Vimeo. 30张照片+ photoshop批处理+quicktime保存成影片 = 1秒钟的火车突突突。 试验作品, 挺有意思的。以后会越来越复杂的~ 小阅兵Toy Soldiers from Alta Media Productions on Vimeo. 包子Dragon Fist from sun haipeng on Vimeo. 贼有才 mac transformer ...这个视频特效太强了... popular video...这个w.总统混的太惨了... Gtalkl视频Google的聊天工具Gtalk终于支持语音和视频聊天了. 同时支持Mac和windows系统哦~ http://mail.google.com/videochat 需要下载一个插件 Cute Hamster... 居然还有专门的配乐... 国庆快乐~ 从当年50周年国庆游行练队到现在居然已经9年了... 好快 这两天就是下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨之后刮大风, 然后再下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨下雨......冬天要到了. 看见一个望远镜的广告, 很逗,见下图 这三件事儿不挨着...只不过写一起了. Time eater一个花了1百万英镑,造了7年的钟.昨天正式挂在了剑桥大学的图书馆.还请了Stephen Hawking来揭幕. 这个钟叫做Time eater, 钟的制造者想提醒大家时间一去不复返,表盘上面是一只巨大的机械蝗虫,每秒钟把表盘向后拨动一格.然后在59秒时蝗虫的嘴会吞咽一次, 意味着一分钟的时间已经逝去... 这要是在剑桥大学自习被这么一只蝗虫盯着压力可是太大了.不过很喜欢机械钟的滴答滴答声. 10 Things About the Large Hadron Collider You Wanted to Know But Were Afraid to Ask转自一个很有意思的博客neatorama
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1. Why is it called the Large Hadron Collider?The first one is easy: Large because it is really big. The LHC is a large circular tunnel with a circumference of 27 kilometers (17 miles), buried in the ground under an average of 100 m (328 ft) of dirt and rock. In particle physics, hadron is a family of subatomic particles made of quarks and held together by the strong force*. Examples of hadrons are protons and neutrons. As you can guess from the name, the LHC uses mostly protons (with some ions) for its experiments. Lastly, collider because the LHC accelerates protons into two beams travelling in opposite directions and then collides them to see what particles come out. *There are four fundamental interactions: the strong force, the weak force, the electromagnetic force and gravity. Despite initial observations of the elusive metachlorian by Jinn, QG, et al (1999) Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace, the existence of "The Force" remains a controversial hypothesis unaccepted by most modern scientists. 2. Why is it underground?Well, that's because finding 27 kilometers worth of real estate above ground is really, really expensive. Actually, the LHC uses a tunnel originally dug for a previous collider (the LEP or the Large Electron Positron collider), which was decomissioned in 2000. All that dirt and rock also provide great shielding to reduce the amount of natural radiation that reaches the LHC's detectors. 3. Why is the LHC like a Werewolf?Both are affected by the Moon! Like tides in the ocean, the ground is also subject to lunar attraction. When the Moon is full, the Earth's crust actually rises about 25 cm (9.8 in). This movement causes the circumference of the LHC to vary by (a whopping) 1 mm (out of 27 km, a factor of 0.000004%) ) but that's enough so that physicists need to take it into account. (Source: CERN FAQ: LHC, the Guide [PDF]) 4. Why is the LHC like a Refrigerator?The Large Hadron Collider is not only a cool particle physics gizmo, it's also a very, very cold one. Indeed, it is the largest cryogenic system in the world and is one of the coldest places on Earth. To keep them at superconducting temperature, scientists have to cool the LHC's magnets down to 1.9 K (-271.3°C), which is lower than the temperature of outer space (-270.5°C). First, the magnets are cooled to -193.2°C using 10,000 tons of liquid nitrogen. Then 90 tons of liquid helium is used to lower the temperature down to -271.3°C. The whole cooling process takes a few weeks. 5. Who the heck is CERN anyway?In 1952, eleven European countries came together to form the European Council for Nuclear Research (Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire in French, which gave it the acronym CERN). Two years later in 1954 it was renamed the European Organization for Nuclear Research, which would've given it the French name of Organisation Européenne pour la Recherche Nucléaire or the acronym OERN). Nobody liked "OERN", so the acronym CERN stuck. If CERN sounds familiar to you even before this whole LHC business got started, that's because the World Wide Web was started by CERN employees Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Robert Cailliau (See: 10 Things You Should Know About the Internet) 6. How much does it cost, and who's paying for it?The Large Hadron Collider is nearly 30 years in the making - and costs the member countries of CERN and other participating countries an estimated €4.6 billion (about US$ 6.4 billion). Like those late night infomercials, however, we can say "but that's not all!" Extra things like detectors, computing capacity, and extra warranty (just kidding!) cost an extra €1.43 billion. The United Kingdom, for example, contributes £34 million per year, less than the cost of a pint of beer per adult in the country per year (Source). The United States contributed approximately $531 million to the development and construction of components for the LHC (with the US Department of Energy shelling out $450 million and the National Science Foundation kicking in the remaining $81 million). 7. How much electricity is used to run the LHC?It takes 120 MW to run the LCH - approximately the power consumption of all the Canton State of Geneva. Need a better comparison? 120 megawatt is equivalent to the energy used by 1,2 million 100 watt incadescent light bulb or 120,000 average California home. It's estimated that the yearly energy cost of running the LHC is €19 million. 8. How much data is expected from the LHC?The LHC experiments represents about 150 million sensors delivering data 40 million times a second. The data flow is about 700 MB/s, or about 15,000,000 GB (15 petabyte) per year. If you put all that in CDs, it'll stack 20 km tall each year! Perhaps it's better to put them in DVDs. That'll just be 100,000 DVDs every year ... To prepare for the deluge of data, CERN built the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid - sort of a super-fast, private Internet connecting some 80,000 computers to analyze the data (Source). 9. Okay, will the LHC spawn a black hole that'll eat my planet?Every time physicists come up with particle accelerators, party poopers come up with doomsday scenarios on how they will destroy Earth: black holes, killer strangelets, magnetic monopoles, and vacuum bubbles. Let's talk about them one by one:
In all of these cases - if micro black hole, strangelets, magnetic monopoles, and vacuum bubbles were a problem to begin with, they would've been created by cosmic rays already. The continued existence of Earth and the rest of the universe tend to discount the validity of these doomsday scenarios. But if you were itching to celebrate our continued survival, here's a "I Survived the Large Hadron Collider" T-shirt from Neatorama's Online Store for you: Link - $9.95 10. How can I help?Well, although over 7,000 physicists are tackling the hard sciencey stuff, your computer can help! The LHC@home project lets you contribute idle time on your computer to help calculate simulations of the real thing. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 嘿嘿 刚看见新闻说大力神会出现在变形金刚2里面 可以合体的哦~ 龙珠看见了电影版的海报...也忒不像了.
周润发做不成龟仙人也就算了. 这俩你猜是谁: 答案: 电影版的布尔玛有点古墓丽影的意思..短笛又没触角又不绿.貌似脑袋顶上还有纹身,写个"神"? 广告!Google 出自己的浏览器了~ Google Chrome~ 相当不错,可能因为是beta版,没啥特殊功能,就能上个网,速度无比的快...还会自动导入firefox的设置~ 界面效果是平面的,标签在地址栏上面,很fashion, 很google. 能把常用的页面弄成快捷方式放桌面上,不过感觉就是把网页从收藏夹里拿出来了...没太大用.还有在地址栏里面的地址主地址是高亮的,slash之后的内容是灰的,很人性~另外图标有点丑 目前感觉是很好,还没有很强大.不过前景很乐观,感觉无论什么和google结合一下都能无敌了.比如今天看见一个PS3游戏讲的大概是里面的事儿,就是作为最后一个幸存者逃避僵尸并且寻找其它幸存者,地图用的居然是google earth....这逃到哪年去. 说到游戏这年头游戏无处不在,picasa相册里面居然也有游戏,很逗.从所有picasa用户公共相册里随机出现一张照片,然后旁边是googel earth的世界地图让你猜照片在哪照的...根据你点的地方和正确的地方的距离给分...由于是随机出照片所以相当不靠谱... 跑题了,anyway,这个新浏览器很不错~特此推荐 奥运会,终于到了
呵呵,开幕式感觉还不错~觉着吓唬外国人足够了,有些东西太细节了,比如京剧木偶,这跟篮球馆里看斗蛐蛐儿似的...实在有点小。人肉鸟巢那段很喜欢,还有烟火非常cool。
看的德国的转播,HD的信号看的很爽,全屏也没有马赛克。后来在网上看说德国俩解说一个没文化一个很反华另外也没文化,anyway不懂德语,哈哈哈。 |
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