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World's largest super collider taken down for repairs

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image Computer generated image showing the location of the 27 km round LHC tunnel (in blue) on the Swiss-France border. Image: CERN

After an exciting start, a helium leak within the LHC tunnel (likely caused by a faulty electrical connection between two magnets), necessitated taking the project offline for repairs.

After a much heralded start on September 10, the world’s largest particle collider, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), has been taken down for “a minimum of two months” according to a press statement issued by the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN. 

When the experiment was launched on Sept. 10, scientists circled a beam of protons in a clockwise direction at the speed of light, then shut the collider down and turned on a counterclockwise beam. Scientists said the beam made several hundred circuits around the 27-kilometer long underground ring. 

On Sept. 11, scientists had succeeded in controlling the counterclockwise beam with equipment that keeps the protons in the tightly bunched stream that will be needed for collisions, but then the first set-back occurred when a power transformer switched off the main compressors of the cryogenics for two sectors of the machine.  The 30-ton transformer was exchanged over the weekend. 

The collider was briefly brought back into operation on Sept. 18. Then on Friday, Sept. 19, a monitoring system detected a large helium leak within the circular tunnel’s last section. Preliminary investigations indicate that the most likely cause of the problem was a faulty electrical connection between two magnets, which probably melted at high current leading to mechanical failure, according to CERN.  

At no time were people involved with the experiment at risk, said CERN 

The LHC is designed to accelerate sub-atomic particles to nearly the speed of light and then smash them into each other to reveal more about the makeup of matter and the universe.

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Subscribe to comments feed Comments (2 posted):

Mitchell Davenport on 09/22/2008 19:13:26
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Such a pity, I was looking forward to the collision this October only for it to be delayed for another two months. Hopefully, the project doesn't have any more problems and runs smoothly from here on out.
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valentines day gift ideas on 01/04/2010 23:42:10
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Pretty cool post here.I was not having and information of this news.I would say this is good because that super collider thing scares the heck out of me!Thanks for sharing such a great information within us...
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