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First Person: Sally C. Seidel
by
Saunders, Fenella
in
Collaboration
/ College faculty
/ College teachers
/ Elementary particles
/ Experiments
/ Large Hadron Collider
/ Physicists
/ Protons
/ Quarks
/ Seidel, Sally C
/ Studies
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
First Person: Sally C. Seidel
by
Saunders, Fenella
in
Collaboration
/ College faculty
/ College teachers
/ Elementary particles
/ Experiments
/ Large Hadron Collider
/ Physicists
/ Protons
/ Quarks
/ Seidel, Sally C
/ Studies
2017
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Journal Article
First Person: Sally C. Seidel
2017
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Overview
Saunders interviews Sally C. Seidel, faculty member of the University of New Mexico's Collider Physics Group about her research focuses on improving the understanding of heavy quark bound states, which in turn can help to elucidate the strong force, one of the four fundamental forces of nature. Seidel said the fundamental particles, as far as people know, are typically pointlike objects. They might have mass, but sometimes they don't have any physical dimension. The particles that are like protons are physically extended and when they collide them in colliders like the Large Hadron Collider, they can determine that they actually have structure. She added the purpose of a particle collider is to collect a lot of energy at a very small point, and they do that by colliding two particles that are carrying a lot of energy.
Publisher
SIGMA XI, THE SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH HONOR SOCIETY,Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society,Sigma XI-The Scientific Research Society
Subject
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