午夜福利1000集合

Mould gets artistic to take particle decay photo to a new level

For 30 years, mould marched across this image, eating through the protein in the gelatin-based emulsion and leaving a chaotic swirl of colours

mould on slide

AT THE Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Switzerland, physicists are used to looking for signs of particle decay in the detectors. But as they were digitising archival photos of particle collisions, Matteo Volpi and Jean-Yves LeMeur came across a different kind of decay: mould.

For 30 years, this slide was exposed to a mould that marched across the image, eating through the protein in the gelatin-based emulsion. The resulting chemical reactions left a chaotic swirl of colours and textures reminiscent of an abstract painting. To save the corroded image as it is now, Volpi and LeMeur shone a light through the slide and then photographed the projection.

Volpi is a photographer himself, and has tried to recreate the effect. 鈥淚鈥檝e tried burning and freezing, and I use yeast and beer to create mould. It makes a nice effect, but I can鈥檛 reproduce these colours and textures. I don鈥檛 have 30 years to wait, like this mould did.鈥

slide

The slide was unearthed in a dusty desk drawer in a corridor of the experimental physics department at CERN. Like its better-preserved companion slide above, it showed a simulation of an electron-positron collision at DELPHI, one of four detectors at the LHC鈥檚 predecessor, the Large Electron-Positron Collider. The blue horizontal lines represent the beams of particles that meet head on in the detector鈥檚 cylindrical cavity, and the spray of arcs extending from the middle track the particles born in the smash-up.

Photographer
Volmeur 2017 CERN

This article appeared in print under the headline 鈥淏reaking the mould鈥

Topics: Chemistry / Large Hadron Collider / Particle physics / photography