Large Hadron Collider Revs Up

March 31, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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In this March 22, 2007 file photo, the magnet core of the world's largest superconducting solenoid magnet (CMS, Compact Muon Solenoid) is shown in Geneva, Switzerland. The world's largest atom smasher set a record for high-energy collisions on Tuesday, March 30, 2010 by crashing proton beams into each other at three times more force than ever before. In a milestone in the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider's ambitious bid to reveal details about theoretical particles and microforces, scientists at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, collided the beams and took measurements at a combined energy level of 7 trillion electron volts.

By Laura Sanders, Science News

By all accounts, the Large Hadron Collider’s first day of bashing protons was a smashing success. The powerful machine at CERN, Europe’s high-energy physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, got off to a rocky start on March 30. But by early afternoon (Geneva time), two 3.5 trillion electron volt beams were colliding head-on.

The collisions in the 27-kilometer-long accelerator set a new record for the highest energy crash of subatomic particles.

“Today, we opened the door and put our nose through it,” says physicist Jurgen Schukraft, spokesperson for CERN’s ALICE experiment, which is tasked with exploring new types of matter produced in the high-energy collisions. 

Researchers have routinely circulated beams at 3.5 TeV since March 19, but had not yet collided them. Around 1 pm local time, CERN tweeted “Experiments have seen collisions!!!!!!!!!!!” followed quickly by “First time in the history!!!!!!!!!!!! World record!!!!!!!!”

In the first hour of collisions, scientists had already collected more data than they did in weeks before that. Experiments recorded data for more than three hours before ramping down for the day.

“Already it looks like we are entering new territory,” Schukraft says. But it will take “years, not days or weeks,” he adds, to answer physicists’ questions about theoretical predictions like the elusive Higgs particle, dark matter and supersymmetry.

A morning collision attempt was aborted when a piece of overly sensitive equipment detected errant electromagnetic radiation. Scientists resolved the issue, and by the early afternoon, “it was all ok,” Schukraft says. “It works perfectly.”

CERN plans to run the accelerator at 3.5 TeV per beam for the next 18 months to two years, with a brief maintenance break at the end of 2010. After experiments at this energy level are complete, the LHC will be shut down and prepared to run at its maximum energy of 7 TeV per beam. If all goes according to plan, the collider will begin operating at full power in 2013.

Schukraft dismisses fears that these kinds of high-energy collisions could produce a voracious black hole and swallow the world by pointing out that he is “standing rather close to the experiment” and still able to carry on a conversation.

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yay now i dont need to worry about the world ending

Damien of VT 6:06AM April 07, 2010

Bruce V. Williams posits, "God is the One who reveals, and the One who hides. We can not fathom God."

Don't believe everything you read on your belly button lint. Seriously.

He asks, "Is it by chance that the earth has so much water, that it tilts at just the right angle, and it revolves around the sun at just the right distance?"

Yes, because Earth was not built for us, we evolved to fit the conditions. Had the conditions been different, you would, presumably, be extolling as proof of a divine Being the amazing facts that it had no axial tilt, little or no of that poison known as water and was close enough to the Sun provide us with the comfortable 250 degree days we needed for life.

GalapagosPete of CA 1:31AM April 01, 2010

bc says, "A more honest and true statement might be " All the evidence that I have viewed has led me to " Believe "that the "Intelligent Design theory" is wrong."

Or even better: "A lack of either evidence or necessity for an intelligence being behind the existence of the universe, it is reasonable to conclude that no such being exists. Mere ignorance does not justify invoking gods-of-the-gaps."

bc concludes, "We " Know " nothing, but we " Believe " that we do."

Speak for yourself. Yes, yes, we may all be inside The Matrix and not realize it, but is that truly how you want to live your life? If you "know nothing" then you concede that you don't know what you are talking about, or even if you're talking to anyone, or if what you're saying makes sense.

GalapagosPete of CA 1:23AM April 01, 2010

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