Searching For Dark Matter, With Both Eyes Closed.”
NYTimes Article Category #2. Ciara Jamie Connolly 05.02.00 Submitted 05.04.00
“Searching For Dark Matter, With Both Eyes Closed.” In a deficit-reduction
measure in 1993, the Congress killed plans already underway for building the
superconducting super collider. This proved that the US was ill prepared to join
their European colleagues in studying subatomic particles in the nucleus. This
$10 billion machine designed to speed protons around a 54-mile track and collide
them, so scientists could examine the quarks, elementary particles said to be at
the heart of the nucleus. This machine is the utmost in technological
advancement this century. European physicists are leading the way with their
laboratory, unchallenged in a prestigious field the United States had pioneered.
“Without particle smashers, scientists are in the dark,” Michael Riordan states.
This article fits into Category #2 because it shows the importance of the
particle accelerators in helping ascertain scientific theories. If the theories
hold true then billions of tiny particles may be the explanation of the dark
matter that surrounds the Milky Way galaxy in a halo. These particles are
thought to have a gravitational force. The United States do not have a dismal
record of international co-operation on scientific megaprojects, and without
this they will be unable to finance the project. Until now American scientists
have had to travel to the sites of particle accelerators, in the technological
domain of the machine they had thrived to build. However, this method will not
work if the United States want to remain equal partners. Without the technology
it is obvious that particle physicists face a difficult future. The technology
that needs to be at their fingertips is proving too expensive. If they had
constant access to a superconductor collider then the scientists could further
their conclusions on the dark matter of the universe.
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