Particle Fever

2013

Action / Documentary

Plot summary


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720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
754.94 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
24.000 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.44 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
24.000 fps
1 hr 39 min
P/S 0 / 8

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by gavin69427 / 10

Good Film For Science Nerds

Physicists are on the cusp of the greatest scientific discovery of all time -- or perhaps their greatest failure.

As someone who is not a physicist (or even a scientist),but has an interest in physics, this film did a great job of laying out the before and after events of the Large Hadron Collider's search for the Higgs. Others may want more science in their science documentaries, but for a novice like myself, explaining the roles of experimentalists and theorists was very helpful.

Professor Peter Higgs makes a cameo, as he should, but it seems unfortunate he did not have a bigger role in this film. In an indirect way, he is sort of the subject, being one of the original minds that launched this search.

Reviewed by atlasmb8 / 10

The Excitement of a Scientifically Historic Event

This is not an educational film designed for physicists. Those who say the film is light on science should look to its title: "Particle Fever". What does "fever" refer to? Unbridled emotions--from joy to fear--that accompanied scientists' anticipation of an historic event: the operation of the LHC (Large Hadron Collider) in Meyrin, Switzerland.

The film explains how the theoretical basis for the CERN experiments dates back decades. Entire scientific careers have focused on theories that might be perfected or destroyed with data from the LHC.

Before I started watching this documentary, I decided that I was looking for clarity regarding the physics behind this endeavor. And I was hoping that the film would be engaging. The film is a success on both points. As a layperson, I could never hope to understand the mathematics of theoretic physics or the mechanics of experimental physics, but this film provides the basics for understanding the issues at play and their magnitude. Using a few "actors" to speak to the camera, especially those with overt enthusiasm and those who have invested their lifetimes in this arena of scientific thought, helped me feel their "fever" and understand the stakes.

For the most part, this film is presented chronologically, beginning in 2007 as the LHC becomes operational. History and theory are interspersed throughout the film.

The most anticipated results of the LHC data pertained to the Higgs boson, a theoretical particle critical to modern particle theory. Much of the drama, at least for those unfamiliar with the data CERN has provided over the years, concerns this particle.

This film also shows the relationship of the scientific community with media, which sometimes has the power to excite popular opinion for better or worse. Information presented about a CERN-like project in Texas illustrates that politics play its part, often controlling the purse strings.

On the downside, I found some of the universe theory to be anthropocentric and even anthropomorphic. Also, when Nima A. says it is "incredible" that the laws of nature are understandable via math, I understand what he means, but I wonder if there are other "maths" unavailable to us that could explain those laws of nature that are imperceivable by man. We can know but a small part of the multiverse. This is something astronomers have already accepted.

Reviewed by paul2001sw-18 / 10

Why we (should, perhaps) care

The Large Hadron Collider is a gigantic experimental apparatus, conceived in an attempt to discover the fundamental particles that make up the universe. This documentary about it is relatively light on the physics: in concentrates on the hopes of some of the scientists working on it, conveying their innate excitement for their subject rather than the technical details of how and why. But it does convey some of the reasons why this work is (at least theoretically) important: the Higgs Bosun, the previously elusive particle that was target number one for the LHC, is central to modern physical models of the universe; and moreover, determining its mass would help us choose between two broader theories: one is which the universe exists in a state of perfect symmetry, and the other in which it is just one of a huge array of universes, each with their own peculiar properties. And I think the documentary succeeds in inducing its audience to share these concerns. How this relates to the world as we perceive it on a daily basis is very unclear; but the urge to understand is something very fundamental in our humanity, and 'Particle Fever' conveys this well.

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