Chris Morris visits the Large Hadron Collider

June 30 2008 - Physicist Brian Cox guides satirist Chris Morris around the Large Hadron Collider.

Also huffduffed as…

  1. Chris Morris visits the Large Hadron Collider

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets on November 19th, 2008

  2. Chris Morris visits the Large Hadron Collider

    —Huffduffed by theboxfactory on November 24th, 2008

  3. Chris Morris visits the Large Hadron Collider

    —Huffduffed by justin on December 2nd, 2008

  4. Chris Morris visits the Large Hadron Collider

    —Huffduffed by sanchothefat on December 2nd, 2008

  5. Chris Morris visits the Large Hadron Collider

    —Huffduffed by mattthinks on July 29th, 2010

  6. Chris Morris visits the Large Hadron Collider

    —Huffduffed by briankuhl on July 22nd, 2011

Possibly related…

  1. The Large Hadron Collider Goes to Work

    September 11 2008 - Nobel Prize-winning physicist Frank Wilczek and Scientific American editor George Musser talk about the Large Hadron Collider, the most powerful particle accelerator ever built.

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 4 years ago

  2. Lisa Randall: Physics, Science, And The Universe

    If you care about the big questions of the physical world, then Lisa Randall would be great company at a dinner party. Over drinks, the Harvard physicist could tell you what we know and don’t know about particle physics and cosmology.

    During dinner she’d use poetry to describe the Large Hadron Collider – the biggest machine ever built – and the mysteries it could soon reveal. And with dessert — a passionate argument for the value of scientific thinking and what we lose when we put faith over logic.

    http://onpoint.wbur.org/2011/11/14/lisa-randall

    —Huffduffed by Clampants one year ago

  3. Angels and Demons Lecture Night - Hollywood Goes to ATLAS

    http://uslhc.us/Angels_Demons/schedule-videos.html

    May 21, 2009 Carleton University Louise Heelan

    This May will see the world premiere of Angels & Demons, an action-packed thriller based on Dan Brown’s best-selling novel that focuses on an apparent plot to destroy the Vatican using a small amount of antimatter. In the book and the movie, that antimatter is made using the Large Hadron Collider and is stolen from the European particle physics laboratory CERN. Parts of the movie were actually filmed at CERN. It’s not every day that a major motion picture places particle physics in the spotlight, especially one starring Tom Hanks and directed by Ron Howard. Through a series of public lectures, the particle physics community is using this opportunity to tell the world about the real science of antimatter, the Large Hadron Collider and the excitement of particle physics research.

    —Huffduffed by michele 3 years ago