Posts Tagged ‘large hadron’

CERN to Resume Search for “Big Bang” Secrets

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

GENEVA (Reuters) – The world’s largest scientific experiment will try to collide particles at the highest energy level so far from March 30, recreating conditions at the “Big Bang” birth of the universe 13.7 billion years ago, CERN said on Tuesday.

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), centered in a 27-kilometre (16.78 mile) circular underground tunnel beneath the French-Swiss border, began circulating particles last November after being shut down in September 2008 because of over-heating.

Twin beams are currently circulating at 3.5 tera-electron volts (TeV), the highest energy ever achieved, and will accelerate in coming days, according to the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN).

“The first attempt for collisions at 7 TeV (3.5 TeV per beam) is scheduled for March 30,” it said in a statement.

Rolf Heuer, CERN’s Director-General, said: “It may take hours or even days to get collisions”.

The multiple collisions at 7 TeV will each create mini-Big Bangs, producing data that thousands of scientists will analyze for years to come.

“Just lining the beams up is a challenge in itself: it’s a bit like firing needles across the Atlantic and getting them to collide half way,” said Steve Myers, CERN’s director for accelerators and technology.

Once the high-speed collisions are established, the plan is to run continuously for 18-24 months, with a short technical pause at the end of 2010, CERN said.

Dark matter, which scientists believe makes up 25 percent of the universe but whose existence has never been proven, could be detected, officials say.

Astronomers and physicists say that only 5 percent of the universe is known currently, and that the invisible remainder consists of dark matter and dark energy, which make up some 25 percent and 70 percent, respectively.

“If we can detect and understand dark matter, our knowledge will expand to encompass 30 percent of the universe, a huge step forward,” Heuer told a news conference earlier this month.

CERN to Resume Search for “Big Bang” Secrets

LHC Achieves Collisions At 7 TeV

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Posted on: Tuesday, 30 March 2010, 08:05 CDT

Officials at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) have successfully achieved a collision at 7 trillion electron volts (TeV), the latest milestone in their search for Higgs boson — also known as the “God Particle” — as they attempt to reach levels in their Large Hadron Collider (LHC).

CERN spokeswoman Paola Catapano called it “physics in the making” and “the beginning of a new era,” and according to the AFP, “Cheers erupted in separate control rooms around the 27-kilometre (16.8-mile) long Large Hadron Collider (LHC) as the detectors recorded the collisions of beams of sub-atomic particles at close to the speed of light.”

Early Tuesday morning, CERN researchers at their Geneva-based facility fired up the LHC as they began their successful attempt to cause particle collisions to occur at a level close to the speed of light. Their ultimate mission is to generate a small-scale, artificial “Big Bang” that will provide insight as to how the universe was formed.

Previously, they had established the beam record at 3.5 TeV.

“We are opening the door to New Physics, to a new period of discovery in the history of humankind,” CERN director-general told Robert Evens of Reuters on Monday. At that time, Evans notes that it might be “hours or even days before the first collisions happen.”

Scientists in the LHC facility, as well as those watching the proceeding from afar, did not have to wait as long as some had anticipated, however. Following a short delay due to power supply and magnet safety system glitches, the high powered collisions were being reported shortly after 7am Central time.

The next steps involve trying to prove the existence of the Higgs boson, as well as find evidence and discern the properties of dark matter and dark energy — discoveries which could have a profound effect on modern-day theoretical physics.

“I can’t think of anything more important for us theorists right now,” University of Manchester physicist Jeff Forshaw told The Guardian on Monday. “It’s easy to dream up theories, but it’s very, very difficult to dream up theories that are right. The LHC will help us weed out the ones that are wrong.”

“There is a whole (program) of research that builds up to something like the discovery of the Higgs particle and that (program) starts now,” he added. “It has got to work, and I would bet an enormous amount of money that it will find something new.”

Source: RedOrbit Staff & Wire Reports

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LHC Achieves Collisions At 7 TeV