Large Hadron Collider to start operations in few days - CERN

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Large Hadron Collider: how it works - Sputnik International
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The Large Hadron Collider will be re-launched in a few days, the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) said Thursday.

The Large Hadron Collider will be re-launched in a few days, the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) said Thursday.

"Yesterday the LHC was handed over for operation. After a couple of days of machine check-out, the operations team will be able to prepare for injection and then bring the first circulating beams in to the LHC," the CERN website said.

Experiments using the LHC were suspended last September shortly after a successful start, due to a malfunction of two superconducting magnets and a subsequent helium leak into the tunnel housing the device.

Work to repair the collider and upgrade it took over a year. In early November, a system to protect it from such accidents, named the Quench Protection System, was installed.

The collider, located 100 meters under the French-Swiss border with a circumference of 27 km, enables scientists to shoot subatomic particles round an accelerator ring at almost the speed of light, channeled by powerful fields produced by superconducting magnets.

In order to fire beams of protons round the vast underground circular device, the entire ring must be cooled by liquid helium to minus 271 degrees C, just two degrees above absolute zero.

By colliding particles in front of immensely powerful detectors, scientists hope to detect the Higgs boson, nicknamed the "God particle," which was hypothesized in the 1960s to explain how particles acquire mass. Discovering the particle could explain how matter appeared in the split-second after the Big Bang.

The international LHC project has involved more than 2,000 physicists from hundreds of universities and laboratories in 34 countries since 1984. Over 700 Russian physicists from 12 research institutes have taken part.

The construction of the collider cost $4.9 billion, while its repairs after the breakdown cost almost $40 mln.

MOSCOW, November 19 (RIA Novosti)

 

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