http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iHdzr5Lg8vYnBMsPd7jYVzzAJk6QD92U3FA00

This ain't no jive, particle physics rap is a hit


EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Who says science doesn't turn people on? Kate
McAlpine is a rising star on YouTube for her rap performance - about
high-energy particle physics.

Her performance has drawn a half-million views so far on YouTube.

The 23-year-old Michigan State University graduate and science writer raps
about the Large Hadron Collider, the groundbreaking particle accelerator
that has been built in a 17-mile circular tunnel at the CERN laboratory
near Geneva, Switzerland.

McAlpine raps that when the collider goes into operation on Sept. 10, "the
things that it discovers will rock you in the head."

The $3.8 billion machine will collide two beams of protons moving at close
to the speed of light so scientists can see what particles appear in the
resulting debris.

"Rap and physics are culturally miles apart," McAlpine, a science writer
at CERN, wrote to the Lansing State Journal in an e-mail last week, "and I
find it amusing to try and throw them together."

Others, including physicists, also find it amusing.

"We love the rap, and the science is spot on," said CERN spokesman James
Gillies.

McAlpine received permission to film herself and friends dancing in the
caverns and tunnels where the experiments will take place.

"I have to confess that I was skeptical when Katie said she wanted to do
this, but when I saw her previous science rapping and the lyrics, I was
convinced," Gillies said. "I think you'll find pretty close to unanimity
among physicists that it's great."

McAlpine honed her physics rapping skills at Michigan State's National
Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, where she was part of a student
research program two years ago.

Information from: Lansing State Journal, http://www.lansingstatejournal.com

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