(→Mass distributions) |
(→Muons! Masses!) |
||
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
<font color="red">'''Science Hack Day contribution!'''</font> | <font color="red">'''Science Hack Day contribution!'''</font> | ||
| + | [[Image:lhd_screengrab_0.png|400px]] | ||
[http://mattbellis.com/dimuons.html Check out this interactive demo that accumulates the di-muon masses.] | [http://mattbellis.com/dimuons.html Check out this interactive demo that accumulates the di-muon masses.] | ||
Revision as of 23:37, 17 November 2011
Contents |
What is this hack?
One of the experiments from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment), has released a small amount of the data for educational purposes. However, it is hard to access and even more difficult to understand. Can we hack a better interface to these data? Can we create a website to allow others to use these data for education or art? Or can we do real science with these data ? I'll bring the data and explain what is in these datasets and some simple tools to interface with these data. Looking for hackers, coders, educators, artists and definitely designers, to figure out if this can be done.
LHC_Data_Hack/The Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) detector
The data for this hack
The analysis chain
Collisions in the detector
Muons! Masses!
Science Hack Day contribution!
Check out this interactive demo that accumulates the di-muon masses.
Mass distributions
The parent particles and the original discoveries
Further code for exploration
The contributors
Science Hack Day contributors
- Matt Bellis
- Lynn Root
- Aaron Culich
- Morris Mwanga (Kenya ambassador)
- Tim Clem
- Kevin
Even before this project begins, thanks goes out to the CERN and Fermilab CMS collaborators who have helped get this off the ground.
- Tom McCauley (FNAL)
- Tom Jordan (FNAL)
- Giulio Eulisse, developer of ig and iSpy (FNAL)
- Kati Lassila-Perini (CERN)