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Like an only child dreaming of lost siblings, we dream of finding other Earths, other creatures and civilizations out in space, or even other universes. We all want to find out that we are cosmic Anastasias and that there is a secret that connects us, that lays bare the essential unity of physical phenomena. And so we try, sometimes against great odds. The year that is now ending began with some areas of science in ruins. One section of the Large Hadron Collider looked like a train wreck with several-ton magnets lying about smashed after an electrical connection between them vaporized only nine days off a showy inauguration. The Hubble Space Telescope was limping about in orbit with only one of its cameras working. But here is the scorecard at the end of the year: in December, the newly refurbished collider produced a million proton collisions, including 50,000 at the record energy of 1.2 trillion electron volls per proton, before going silent for the holidays. CERN is on track to run it next year at three times that energy. The Hubble telescope after onelast astronaut servicing visit, reached to within spitting distance of the Big Bang andrecorded images of the most distant galaxies yet observed, which existed some 600 million or 700 million years after the putative beginning of time. Not to mention the rapidly expanding universe of extrasolar planets. In my view from the cosmic bleachers, the pot is bubbling for discovery. We all got a hint of just how crazy that might be in the new age of the Internet on Dec. 17, when physicists around the world found themselves glued to a Webcast of the results from an experiment called the Cryogenic Dark Maner Search. Rumors had swept the blogs and other outposts of scientific commentary that the experimenters were going to announce that they had finally delected the ethereal and mysterious dark matter particles, which, astronomers say, make up a quarter of the universe. In the end, the result was frustratingly vague and inconclusive. “We want it to be true—we so want to have a clue about dark matter,” Maria Spiropulu, a Caltech physicist working at CERN wrote to me the night of the Webcast. “And it is not easy,” Dr. Spiropulu said. “The experiments are not easy and the analysis is not easy. This is a tough, tough ride over all.” Although we might well solve part of the dark maner conundrum in the coming years, the larger mystery winds out in front of us like a train snaking into the fog.
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