Large Hadron Collider set to restart
After a shutdown lasting two years, the Large Hadron Collider
(LHC), the world’s biggest and most powerful particle accelerator, is
ready once again for the arrival of particle beams. The teams are
completing the final tests after having solved on 31 March the problem
that had been delaying the restart of the accelerator. The first beams
could be circulating in the machine sometime between Saturday and
Monday.
“We are confident of being able to restart the machine over the weekend, as all of the tests performed so far have been successful,” said Frédérick Bordry, Director for Accelerators and Technology at CERN.
When the LHC and the whole accelerator chain are running, operators work in shifts around the clock in the control room. They will attempt to circulate beams in the LHC in both directions, at their injection energy of 450 GeV, as soon as all the lights are green.
Particle collisions at an energy of 13 TeV could start as early as June.
“We are confident of being able to restart the machine over the weekend, as all of the tests performed so far have been successful,” said Frédérick Bordry, Director for Accelerators and Technology at CERN.
When the LHC and the whole accelerator chain are running, operators work in shifts around the clock in the control room. They will attempt to circulate beams in the LHC in both directions, at their injection energy of 450 GeV, as soon as all the lights are green.
Particle collisions at an energy of 13 TeV could start as early as June.
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