This is the E8 pattern, the most intricate shape known to mathematics. It is an eight-dimensional mathematical pattern with 248 points first found in 1887, but only fully understood by mathematicians this year after workings, that, if written out in small print, would cover an area "the size of Manhattan".
E8 encapsulates the symmetries of a geometric object that is 57-dimensional and is itself is 248-dimensional.
Garrett Lisi, a scientist who rather splendidly seems to spend most of his time surfing or snowboarding, reckons that the mathematics of particle physics conforms to the same pattern, and he predicts that a further twenty particles will be discovered when the Large Hadron Collider comes online next year.
Exciting times to be a physicist!
Comments
I have replied to you on th Heffer thread. Your silence on the goings on I refer to in Georgia leads me to wonder if abuses only matter to you when they are committed by Russians
Lepidus
Why has there been so little public debate about the particle accelaration experiments of the Large Hadron Collider given that there is an (admittedly awfully slender) chance that it might destroy the Earth and indeed possibly the Universe? Does the upside potential discovery really justify the huge gamble?
Wheatley
I think the "risk" of the LHC is so tiny that it is one that I am happy to take. We would have really got to have made some massive errors in the laws of physics to be at risk of any kind of environmental, let alone existential threat.
Does that mean I just created an even more intricate shape?
Since just looking at something changes it...Maybe I also changed the basic physical principles of the universe too. ;-)
see http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2007/11/21/scicosmos121.xml&CMP=ILC-mostviewedbox
Search for " Mankind 'shortening the universe's life'" on the telegraph
The link is fine, it's just the way blogspot renders it. You can cut and paste it normally.