[Wikimediauk-l] Fwd: New display on Higgs boson at the National Museum of Scotland

2013-09-25 Thread brian . mcneil

One for the science geeks...
---BeginMessage---

Please find to follow media release from National Museums Scotland:



[MediaLogo_pink]

  
[2Line2Col_process]




Hunting the Higgs Boson



Friday 27 September 2013 to Sunday 16 February 2014

National Museum of Scotland, Chambers Street, Edinburgh



Admission: Free





A new display at the National Museum of Scotland charts the search for the 
Higgs boson and the continuing quest to discover the fundamental structure of 
the universe.



Hunting the Higgs boson explores the journey by scientists at CERN, the 
European Organisation for Nuclear Research, to pinpoint the Higgs boson 
particle. The famous particle is named after Professor Peter Higgs, who first 
proposed the theory of its existence back in 1964 when working at the 
University of Edinburgh. Scientists have been hunting for the elusive particle 
since the mid-1990s.



Through personal artefacts loaned from Professor Higgs, material from CERN and 
objects charting the history of particle physics, this small exhibition 
provides an introduction to the ground-breaking scientific discovery.



Over 7000 scientists, engineers and support staff from over 40 countries worked 
out of CERN in the search for the invisible particle. 48 years after Peter 
Higgs' theory was published CERN announced that they had found a new particle 
consistent with the Higgs boson. Following its discovery Professor Higgs 
commented that he didn't expect this to happen in his lifetime.



An array of commemorative medals presented to him for his impact on the world 
of physics, including one from the Royal Society of Edinburgh to mark the Higgs 
boson discovery, can be viewed in the exhibition. Also on display is a slice of 
prototype magnet from the Large Hadron Collider presented to Higgs when the 
experiments which finally found the Higgs boson were still in the planning 
stages, nine years before the first beam was fired around the accelerator.



The technology behind the discovery of the Higgs boson has had a huge impact, 
and has resulted in many real-world applications including use in medical 
scanners and solar panels. In 1989 the solution for storing and sharing vast 
amounts of information in use at CERN came from Tim Berners-Lee and eventually 
grew into the World Wide Web.





Tacye Phillipson, Senior Curator of Modern Science at National Museums Scotland 
commented,



Particle physics is an incredible collaborative endeavour. This small 
exhibition shows how far it has come in the quest to understand our universe, 
and the impact that the technology developed in the hunt for the Higgs boson 
has had on our everyday lives.



Hunting the Higgs boson was developed in partnership with the University of 
Edinburgh.





24 September 2013
Ends


Further information and images from Susan Gray, Press Office on 0131 247 4288, 
or email s.g...@nms.ac.ukmailto:s.g...@nms.ac.uk

Website www.nms.ac.ukhttp://www.nms.ac.uk/

Notes to Editors


1.National Museums Scotland is one of the leading museum groups in the UK 
and Europe and it looks after collections of national and international 
importance. The organisation provides loans, partnerships, research and 
training in Scotland and internationally. Our individual museums are the 
National Museum of Scotland, the National Museum of Flight, the National Museum 
of Rural Life and the National War Museum. The National Museums Collection 
Centre in Edinburgh houses conservation and research facilities as well as 
collections not currently on display.


2.The National Museum of Scotland reopened in summer 2011 following a 
three-year, £47m redevelopment. Since then it has entered the top ten most 
popular UK visitor attractions (ALVA), becoming the most popular attraction in 
the country outside of London. With over 4 million visitors since re-opening, 
the Museum is also one of the top 20 most popular art museums and galleries in 
the world (The Art Newspaper). It was also voted the number one museum in the 
UK in TripAdvisor's inaugural Travellers' Choice Awards earlier this year.


3.CERN
The name CERN stands for 'Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire', the 
European Council for Nuclear Research.

It is the European particle physics laboratory on the border between 
Switzerland and France, was founded in 1954 to increase international 
scientific collaboration. It brings together scientists from all over the 
world, sharing the costs as well as the knowledge of complex experiments into 
particle and nuclear physics.








Our exclusive summer exhibition is now on! Discover the epic tale of Mary, 
Queen of Scots until 17 November 2013. 
www.nms.ac.uk/mary 

National Museums Scotland, Scottish Charity, No. SC 011130
This communication is intended 

Re: [Wikimediauk-l] Fwd: New display on Higgs boson at the National Museum of Scotland

2013-09-25 Thread Richard Symonds
Perhaps we can get someone to take a photo of the Higgs Boson for Commons?
Surely not that hard, right?

(I am, of course, joking)

Richard Symonds
Wikimedia UK
0207 065 0992

Wikimedia UK is a Company Limited by Guarantee registered in England and
Wales, Registered No. 6741827. Registered Charity No.1144513. Registered
Office 4th Floor, Development House, 56-64 Leonard Street, London EC2A 4LT.
United Kingdom. Wikimedia UK is the UK chapter of a global Wikimedia
movement. The Wikimedia projects are run by the Wikimedia Foundation (who
operate Wikipedia, amongst other projects).

*Wikimedia UK is an independent non-profit charity with no legal control
over Wikipedia nor responsibility for its contents.*


On 24 September 2013 13:12, brian.mcn...@wikinewsie.org wrote:

 One for the science geeks...


 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Susan Gray s.g...@nms.ac.uk
 To:
 Cc:
 Date: Tue, 24 Sep 2013 09:07:16 +
 Subject: New display on Higgs boson at the National Museum of Scotland

 ** **

 Please find to follow media release from National Museums Scotland:

 ** **

 ** **

 ** **

 [image: MediaLogo_pink]
   
   
  [image:
 2Line2Col_process]   

 **

 * *

 *Hunting the Higgs Boson*

 ** **

 *Friday 27 September 2013 to Sunday 16 February 2014 *

 *National Museum of Scotland, Chambers Street, Edinburgh*

 ** **

 *Admission: Free*

 ** **

 ** **

 A new display at the National Museum of Scotland charts the search for
 the Higgs boson and the continuing quest to discover the fundamental
 structure of the universe.

 ** **

 *Hunting the Higgs boson* explores the journey by scientists at CERN, the
 European Organisation for Nuclear Research, to pinpoint the Higgs boson
 particle. The famous particle is named after Professor Peter Higgs, who
 first proposed the theory of its existence back in 1964 when working at the
 University of Edinburgh. Scientists have been hunting for the elusive
 particle since the mid-1990s.

 ** **

 Through personal artefacts loaned from Professor Higgs, material from CERN
 and objects charting the history of particle physics, this small exhibition
 provides an introduction to the ground-breaking scientific discovery.

 ** **

 Over 7000 scientists, engineers and support staff from over 40 countries
 worked out of CERN in the search for the invisible particle. 48 years after
 Peter Higgs’ theory was published CERN announced that they had found a new
 particle “consistent with the Higgs boson”. Following its discovery
 Professor Higgs commented that he didn’t expect this to happen in his
 lifetime. 

 ** **

 An array of commemorative medals presented to him for his impact on the
 world of physics, including one from the Royal Society of Edinburgh to mark
 the Higgs boson discovery, can be viewed in the exhibition. Also on display
 is a slice of prototype magnet from the Large Hadron Collider presented to
 Higgs when the experiments which finally found the Higgs boson were still
 in the planning stages, nine years before the first beam was fired around
 the accelerator. 

 ** **

 The technology behind the discovery of the Higgs boson has had a huge
 impact, and has resulted in many real-world applications including use in
 medical scanners and solar panels. In 1989 the solution for storing and
 sharing vast amounts of information in use at CERN came from Tim
 Berners-Lee and eventually grew into the World Wide Web.

 ** **

 ** **

 Tacye Phillipson, Senior Curator of Modern Science at National Museums
 Scotland commented,

 ** **

 *“Particle physics is an incredible collaborative endeavour. This small
 exhibition shows how far it has come in the quest to understand our
 universe, and the impact that the technology developed in the hunt for the
 Higgs boson has had on our everyday lives.” *

 ** **

 *Hunting the Higgs boson* was developed in partnership with the
 University of Edinburgh.

 ** **

 ** **

 24 September 2013

 Ends

 * *

 *Further information and images from Susan Gray, Press Office on 0131 247
 4288, or email *s.g...@nms.ac.uk

 * *

 Website *www.nms.ac.uk* http://www.nms.ac.uk/

 * *

 *Notes to Editors*

 ** **

 **1.**National Museums Scotland is one of the leading museum groups
 in the UK and Europe and it looks after collections of national and
 international importance. The organisation provides loans, partnerships,
 research and training in Scotland and internationally. Our individual
 museums are the National Museum of Scotland, the National Museum of Flight,
 the National Museum of Rural Life and the National War Museum. The National
 Museums Collection Centre in Edinburgh houses conservation and research
 facilities as well as collections not currently on display.

 ** **

 

Re: [Wikimediauk-l] Fwd: New display on Higgs boson at the National Museum of Scotland

2013-09-25 Thread David Gerard
On 25 September 2013 11:11, Richard Symonds
richard.symo...@wikimedia.org.uk wrote:

 Perhaps we can get someone to take a photo of the Higgs Boson for Commons? 
 Surely not that hard, right?


https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CMS_Higgs-event.jpg


- d.

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Re: [Wikimediauk-l] Fwd: New display on Higgs boson at the National Museum of Scotland

2013-09-25 Thread David Gerard
On 25 September 2013 11:16, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 25 September 2013 11:11, Richard Symonds
 richard.symo...@wikimedia.org.uk wrote:

 Perhaps we can get someone to take a photo of the Higgs Boson for Commons? 
 Surely not that hard, right?

 https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CMS_Higgs-event.jpg



Whoops, that's just simulated! So bring your phones along ;-)


- d.

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Re: [Wikimediauk-l] Fwd: New display on Higgs boson at the National Museum of Scotland

2013-09-25 Thread Katie Chan
There's a time lapse video of ATLAS construction out there somewhere.
I wonder whether we can get the copyright owner to release it under a
free license.

Katie

On 25 September 2013 11:19, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 25 September 2013 11:16, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 25 September 2013 11:11, Richard Symonds
 richard.symo...@wikimedia.org.uk wrote:

 Perhaps we can get someone to take a photo of the Higgs Boson for Commons? 
 Surely not that hard, right?

 https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CMS_Higgs-event.jpg



 Whoops, that's just simulated! So bring your phones along ;-)


 - d.

 ___
 Wikimedia UK mailing list
 wikimediau...@wikimedia.org
 http://mail.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediauk-l
 WMUK: http://uk.wikimedia.org



-- 
Katie Chan
Volunteer Support Organiser
Wikimedia UK
+44 (0) 20 7065 0990
+44 (0) 7885 980 534

Wikimedia UK is a Charitable Company registered in England and Wales.
Registered Company No. 6741827. Registered Charity No.1144513.
Registered Office: 4th Floor, Development House, 56-64 Leonard Street,
London EC2A 4LT. United Kingdom.
Wikimedia UK is the UK chapter of a global Wikimedia movement. The
Wikimedia projects are run by the Wikimedia Foundation (who operate
Wikipedia, amongst other projects).

Wikimedia UK is an independent non-profit charity with no legal
control over Wikipedia nor responsibility for its contents.

___
Wikimedia UK mailing list
wikimediau...@wikimedia.org
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