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Angels, Demons and Black Holes: Threat or Opportunity? Experience from CERN through the start-up of the LHC James Gillies, CERN Erice, 10 May 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Angels, Demons and Black Holes: Threat or Opportunity? Experience from CERN through the start-up of the LHC James Gillies, CERN Erice, 10 May 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Angels, Demons and Black Holes: Threat or Opportunity? Experience from CERN through the start-up of the LHC James Gillies, CERN Erice, 10 May 2010

2 Methodology What does the world know about particle physics?

3 Methodology So allow me to explain…

4 Methodology Trillions of protons race around the 27km ring in opposite directions over 11,000 times a second, travelling at 99.9999991 per cent the speed of light. The fastest racetrack on the planet…

5 Methodology To accelerate protons to almost the speed of light requires a vacuum as empty as interplanetary space. The emptiest space in the solar system…

6 Methodology One of the coldest places in the universe… With an operating temperature of about -271 degrees Celsius, just 1.9 degrees above absolute zero, the LHC is colder than outer space.

7 Methodology When two beams of protons collide, they will generate temperatures 1000 million times hotter than the heart of the sun, but in a minuscule space. The hottest spots in the galaxy…

8 Methodology To sample and record the debris from up to 600 million proton collisions per second, scientists are building gargantuan devices that measure particles with micron precision. The biggest most sophisticated detectors ever built…

9 Methodology To analyse the data, tens of thousands of computers around the world are being harnessed in the Grid. The laboratory that gave the world the web, is now taking distributed computing a big step further. The most extensive computer system in the world…

10 Methodology Why?

11 Methodology To push back the frontiers of knowledge… Newton’s unfinished business… what is mass? Science’s little embarrassment… what is 96% of the Universe made of? Nature’s favouritism… why is there no more antimatter? The secrets of the Big Bang… what was it like in the first second of the Universe’s life? More than meets the eye… are there extra dimensions of space?

12 Methodology Information technology - the Web and the Grid Medicine - diagnosis and therapy Security - scanning technologies for harbours and airports Vacuum - new techniques for flat screen displays or solar energy devices To develop new technologies…

13 Methodology 20 Member states 40 Countries with cooperation agreements 100 Nationalities 10000 People To unite people from different countries and cultures…

14 Methodology From visits for schools, through to professional schools in physics, accelerator science and IT, CERN plays a valuable role in building enthusiasm for science and providing formal training.. To train the scientists and engineers of tomorrow…

15 Methodology Communicating the LHC? We made the most of whatever came our way

16 … this arrived on my desk in 2000

17 … and then came End Day…

18 … and then came The Da Vinci Code

19 It was time for CERN to act! Should we ignore it? Should we fight it? Should we seize the opportunity?

20 True or false? CERN has a space plane. ✗ CERN makes antimatter. ✓ Georges Charpak plays frisbee. ✗ Antimatter could solve the energy crisis. ✗ Antimatter is used in PET scanners. ✓ PET scanners are developed at CERN. ✓

21 2007: a visit from Ron Howard…

22 …led to a contract with Sony…

23 …some filming…

24 …and a big media junket at CERN

25 We did tie-ins with the launch, and we’re on the BluRay disk

26 Methodology Even Earth-eating black holes?

27 They’ve always been there.. YearMachineWebHype 1989 LEPNoneNone 1999 RHICWeb 1.0Little 2008 LHCWeb 2.0Lots

28 CERN played it low key…

29 …at least at first. 50/50

30 Would we do the same again? CERN in fiction…CERN in fiction dressed up as fact… Both helped us get sell our story. With hindsight, we’d have treated them in the same way.

31 Methodology Meanwhile, back at the lab…

32

33 Methodology CERN LHC Communication Plan DRAFT 1, 15 January 2005: The aim of this plan is to gain maximum benefit in terms of public image for CERN and particle physics world-wide through the unique communications opportunity presented by the start-up of the LHC in 2007, and first results coming in some months later. It is a three-year plan starting in 2006. The start up of the LHC provides a unique opportunity to promote these messages, and in addition to position the LHC as a European success story and a global endeavour. It also gives us the opportunity to position fundamental science as a long-range force for innovation through each of CERN’s four missions - research and discovery; training; technology; collaboration.

34 Singing in harmony

35 Methodology Strength in numbers…

36 Methodology CERN strategic communication plan 2009-2013 DRAFT 1, 22 April 2009 This plan covers the period 2009-2013, during which the first results from the LHC will be published. Its main objective is to build on the platform created by the public impact of the LHC start-up in 2008 to position CERN’s key message of basic science as a key knowledge and innovation driver.

37 Methodology Our approach: transparency

38 Methodology Perception versus reality What is CERN? European Organization for Nuclear Research? European Laboratory for Particle Physics? PerceptionReality CERN is a nuclear labParticle physics CERN does military researchForbidden CERN is secretivePublishes openly CERN is closedOpen to the public Much of our intranet is accessible. Many of our scientists are encouraged and enabled to communicate.

39 Methodology Open communication works

40 Methodology And costs nothing.. Gain trust You have no choice If it falls down, the world will know anyway.

41 Methodology The world is watching.

42 Methodology Startup events, 2008 and 2010 5-6 April 2008. open days 10 September 2008. First beam 21 October 2008. Official inauguration 30 March 2010. First Physics Neighbours Media Political Media

43 Methodology The overall result…

44 Methodology 10 September 2008 450 broadcasters 2500 transmissions 91 stand-ups Audience in hundreds of millions “CERN is the new NASA!”

45 … well, for a couple of days at least…

46 … and it continued through 2009. Global language monitor… Word of the year: twitter, but hadron came in at number 8 Phrase of the year: king of pop, but god particle came in at 10 Name of the Year: Barak Obama, but LHC was number 4 Time magazine… LHC restart made top 10 science discoveries Bird drops bread made top 10 odd news stories

47 Methodology 30 March 2010 CERN went from 90,000 to 120,000 followers during the day Keywords "LHC", "CERN", "TeV" and "experiment" were all global trends on Twitter at some point during the day CERN's public homepage recorded 205,000 visitors (unique IPs) from 185 countries. Normal average 10,000 visitors per day The Press Office site recorded 154,000 visitors. Normal average 2,000 per day 231 peak simultaneous connections to CERN's HQ broadcast (from LHC institutes) The CERN LHC First Physics webcast was visited by 700,000 unique computers (IP addresses) GroovyGecko CEO: "make no mistake, this was a huge webcast” Yospace mobile streaming: 3,521 stream requests

48 Making that headline come true! What’s next? “The troubles of the mountains lie behind us. Before us lie the troubles of the plains.” - Bertolt Brecht


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