Inside the CMS - Double Bill

I'm only part way through editing and uploading a bunch of videos we filmed at CERN, in Geneva.


However two of the main films from the CMS Experiment have now been released (above is a pic of us on the way in).

CMS (Compact Muon Solenoid) is one of the two more famous detectors on the Large Hadron Collider.

The other one, at the opposite side of the ring, is called ATLAS.

We visited both.

(No disrespect to ALICE and LHCb experiments - I hope they'll invite us back one day!)

Here's the recently uploaded video about CMS, including the first time Professor Ed Copeland laid eyes on the huge machine.



And here, as a DVD extra, is an uncut video from when I gave my camera to a member of CMS staff who was able to enter parts of the machine which were restricted for visitors like us!!!

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A Diamond Anniversary

In Oxfordshire today making some new films for Backstage Science.

I'm at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and just walked past the Diamond Synchrotron, which must be one of my favourite buildings in the UK.

Very cool looking - somewhere between a sports stadium and flying saucer.

And then, coincidentally, a few moments later I read on Twitter that it's Diamond's 10th birthday!

There are a million great films about Diamond and what they do... But here are some of those I've made over the last year or two.

















PS: Check out my new Backstage Science Aerial Map - including Diamond of course!

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Supernova in M95

The Deep Sky Videos project has a strong focus on the so-called Messier Catalogue.

Throughout 2012 we're gradually making videos on all 110 of these distant objects in space.


Although fascinating, to human eyes this collection of galaxies, stars and nebula seem almost frozen in time (an illusion created by us living relatively short lives)

It seems we can simply make videos about them at our leisure - nothing much changes year-on-year, other than our scientific knowledge of them.

So this week has been exciting... Something changed.



A few days ago a bright spot appeared in the galaxy M95, billions of light-years away.

It was a suspected supernova - a violent and spectacular star explosion.

This meant a red alert for me (and the team of astronomers who make the videos possible).

After a flurry of phone calls and emails, I hurriedly filmed interviews with Mike Merrifield and Meghan Gray at the University of Nottingham.

I also consulted with Paul Crowther at the University of Sheffield, who first alerted me to supernova via Twitter.

I then rushed home and started editing.

But I also contacted astrophotographer Nik Szymanek (right), a regular contributor to Deep Sky Videos.

He was working at his backyard observatory and said he would be turning his telescope to M95.

Coincidentally, M95 currently appears very close Mars.

Of course Mars is far, far closer to Earth  (it is after all in our own Solar System whereas M95 is a whole other galaxy).

But this accidental and temporary "line of sight" issue was a nightmare for Nik.

Nik said he would have abandoned the image under normal circumstances, but persevered for my sake and cobbled together some quick exposures.

In this first image, the supernova is highlighted at the galaxy's outer edge. Light from Mars can be seen streaming in from the left.


This second image is a mosaic, showing Mars nearby (the "apparent" distance between M95 and Mars, as you look from Earth, is about the width of the Moon!)



Mars is obviously a small planet. A supernova is one of the brightest objects imaginable... Yet the relative distances from Earth mean that Mars appears millions of times brighter.

Mars can easily be seen with the naked eye whereas you need magnification to see the supernova.

When we made our video, the supernova was still "unconfirmed". Perhaps it was a less bright object closer to Earth?

However the light spectrum has now been checked and it is indeed a Type IIP supernova!

It even has a name: SN2012aw

It should be visible (with telescopes) for another 2 or 3 months.

And because M95 is close (in galaxy terms) and well imaged, perhaps astronomers will be able to do some detective work and figure out which star blew up!?

Images courtesy of Nik Szymanek. Top image of M95 courtesy of Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes.


UPDATE 23 MARCH 2012: EXTRA VIDEO ABOUT THE PROGENITOR STAR


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Sydney Harbour Bridge's Birthday

Today is the 80th birthday of one of my favourite landmarks - the Sydney Harbour Bridge.


And we don't need to go back too far in the archives to find a sciencey video about it.

This one is from the Periodic Table of Videos Aussie Road Trip.




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A Touch of Ireland

It's St Patrick's Day (on March 17). So why not catch up on the sciencey films we made during a road trip to the Emerald Isle?

To be sure, to be sure, it includes a film about Guinness.

And a film on Ireland's only science Nobel Prize winner (not the one pictured)!

The videos were made for both Sixty Symbols and the Periodic Table of Videos.

They feature two of our Irish stars - Professor Phil Moriarty and Dr Darren Walsh.











PS: I promise it was (just) St Patrick's Day when I published this blog - but my blogs get stamped with the time on the US West Coast!!!

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Matching our dedication

A recent Numberphile video featured the "Buffon's Needle" method of calculating Pi - except we used matches.


Here's our video:



But equally impressive is this effort from a viewer, posted this response on YouTube:




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The Highest Form of Flattery?

So Numberphile has already reached the stage where people are making parodies - even our infamous brown paper.

Hmmm.. they say imitation is the highest form of flattery!?



Don't know why the interviewer is being portrayed as such a simpleton? :)

Here's the real deal for comparison.

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