CERN: Science Fiction and the Future of Detection and Imaging

I've had the most amazing few days in Geneva as a guest of Ideas Square at CERN. It's the first time I've been out of the UK in three years, and I was jangly with nerves for a good week before setting off; I'll be jangly with excitement about it all for some time to come.

During lockdown, my friend Dr Una McCormack roped me into some online sessions where sci-fi writers (hello!) were brought in to help / hinder the work being done by students from round the world in attempting to imagine the future impact of technology. This week, a bunch of us assembled in person, got a tour of the Large Hadron Collider and other CERN bits and bobs, and had lots of really interesting chat about, well, everything really. There was high-end physics, and high-end gossip, and high-end physics gossip.

I've returned home with pages and pages of notes in my notebook - bits of new ideas, lists of things to read or look into, random bits of detail. For example, one thing that boggled my brain was that work on constructing the CMS detector (one of a number of detection instruments located round the Large Hadron Collider) was delayed by the discover of Roman ruins on site which then had to be painstakingly excavated. I'm taken by the Nigel Kneale-ish thought of ancient ghosts being picked up by the sensitive detectors...

Then there was the fact that when building this underground facility the team had to dig through a subterranean river. To do so, they dug down to the level of the river, then froze it and dug through the ice, constructing a concrete-lined shaft through the middle before letting the ice thaw. Ingenious!

And how extraordinary, how liberating, to discover that in visiting the CMS we had crossed the border into France without a moment's thought let alone all that mucky business with passports. Coming home, there weren't enough ground crew to let us off the plane so we sat stewing for 45 minutes. There must be a better way of doing things, I thought. Which was exactly the sort of thing these few days have been about.

Here are a few pictures...

View of mountains from CERN hostel
Geneva tram, for my father-in-law
More mountains, plus v hot writer
Tour of the CMS facility;
photo of detector like a gothic rose window
Going underground
Warning signs to give one pause
The LHC creates a magnetic field;
look at its effect on these paperclips!
Doctor U and her plucky assistant
New hat / cool museum
Hot, hot evening, and yet snow on the mountains
Marie Curie clearly delighted to meet me
Very heavy lead,
so dense it would shatter to dust if dropped Arty reconstruction of CMS, using mirrors
 (cf Maxtible in The Evil of the Daleks)
Old-skool, pretty wiring in old device
Where the web,
and so much of my life, began
Cool retro tech in a garden
More cool, retro tech
The Champions
(ie me, Una McCormack and Matthew De Abaitua)


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Published on June 22, 2022 06:51
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