Curiouser and curiouser: a riddle at the ALICE detector
symmetrymagazine.org·18h
🧲Magnetic Resonance
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It was 2023, and Sarah Porteboeuf’s fridge calendar had "heavy-ion run" scribbled in big red letters across the end of September and most of October.

“My family knew that this period was the most intense of the year,” Porteboeuf says.

Porteboeuf is a physicist on the ALICE Experiment, one of the four large experiments that collects data from the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. Typically, when scientists wrap up the LHC’s usual run of proton-proton collisions, they fill the LHC with lead nuclei and do a few weeks of heavy-ion physics.

Unlike the other big experiments, ALICE is designed to study heavy-ion collisions. “The ALICE acronym is A Large Ion Collider Experiment,” Porteboeuf says. “That’s what we do.”

ALICE scientists study quark-gluon plasma—a soup of fundamental particl…

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