In his article on the search
for magnetic monopoles (16 August, p 34), Richard Webb refers to unfounded fears that...
From Keith DavisRichard Webb's article about the search
for magnetic monopoles (16 August, p 34) rang a bell, because I...
Search
for magnetic monopoles with the MoEDAL forward trapping detector in 2.11 fb − 1 of 13 TeV proton - proton collisions at the LHC.
Not exact matches
For a
monopole with twice the minimum charge, Rajantie and Gould determined that
magnetic monopoles must be more massive than about 10 billion electron volts, going by data from collisions of lead nuclei in the Super Proton Synchrotron, a smaller accelerator at CERN.
SOLE POLE Scientists are searching
for hypothetical particles called
magnetic monopoles, which have a single north or south
magnetic pole.
A future incarnation of MoEDAL, located on a mountaintop instead of in an accelerator's cavern, could look
for such
magnetic monopoles that sprinkle down on Earth from space, Pinfold says.
Dr Ludovic Jaubert, group leader in the Professor Nic Shannon's Theory of Quantum Matter Unit at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) together with Prof Roderich Moessner from the Max Planck Institute in Dresden gave a theoretical explanation
for the observation of double - layer structure of
magnetic monopoles in spin ices.
Each
magnetic monopole comes with an electric dipole, but
for most materials the electric polarization is so small that it can not be seen.
This mystery has motivated physicists to search
for magnetic charges, or
magnetic monopoles.
For decades researchers have sought the exception to this rule of fairness and balance: the
magnetic monopole.
And should that signal turn out to be evidence
for cosmic strings or
magnetic monopoles instead, it would still constitute exciting new physics at the frontier of cosmology.
Related paper: Search
for ultrarelativistic
magnetic monopoles with the Pierre Auger Observatory, A. Aab et al. (Pierre Auger Collaboration), Phys.