CERN announces start-up date for LHC
Geneva, 7 August 2008. CERN has today announced that the first attempt to circulate a beam in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will be made on 10 September. This news comes as the cool down phase of commissioning CERN's new particle accelerator reaches a successful conclusion. Television coverage of the start-up will be made available through Eurovision. The LHC is the world's most powerful particle accelerator, producing beams seven times more energetic than any previous machine, and around 30 times more intense when it reaches design performance, probably by 2010. Housed in a 27-kilometre tunnel, it relies on technologies that would not have been possible 30 years ago. The LHC is, in a sense, its own prototype.
Starting up such a machine is not as simple as flipping a switch. Commissioning is a long process that starts with the cooling down of each of the machine's eight sectors. This is followed by the electrical testing of the 1600 superconducting magnets and their individual powering to nominal operating current. These steps are followed by the powering together of all the circuits of each sector, and then of the eight independent sectors in unison in order to operate as a single machine.
By the end of July, this work was approaching completion, with all eight sectors at their operating temperature of 1.9 degrees above absolute zero (-271°C). The next phase in the process is synchronization of the LHC with the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) accelerator, which forms the last link in the LHC's injector chain. Timing between the two machines has to be accurate to within a fraction of a nanosecond. A first synchronization test is scheduled for the weekend of 9 August, for the clockwise-circulating LHC beam, with the second to follow over the coming weeks. Tests will continue into September to ensure that the entire machine is ready to accelerate and collide beams at an energy of 5 TeV per beam, the target energy for 2008. Force majeure notwithstanding, the LHC will see its first circulating beam on 10 September at the injection energy of 450 GeV (0.45 TeV).
Once stable circulating beams have been established, they will be brought into collision, and the final step will be to commission the LHC's acceleration system to boost the energy to 5 TeV, taking particle physics research to a new frontier.
'We're finishing a marathon with a sprint,' said LHC project leader Lyn Evans. 'It's been a long haul, and we're all eager to get the LHC research programme underway.'
Source: CERN
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Other sources
- CERN announces start-up date for Large Hadron Colliderfrom Science CentricMon, 11 Aug 2008, 12:28:11 EDT
- Date Set for Operation of Large Hadron Colliderfrom NY Times ScienceMon, 11 Aug 2008, 4:42:13 EDT
- Large Hadron Collider To Start Up September 10from Science DailySat, 9 Aug 2008, 23:28:17 EDT
- Large Hadron Collider operations scheduledfrom UPIFri, 8 Aug 2008, 9:56:08 EDT
- Large Hadron Collider Date Now September 10from Scientific BloggingThu, 7 Aug 2008, 23:14:05 EDT
- Large Hadron Collider to Get First Taste of Proton Beam [News]from Scientific AmericanThu, 7 Aug 2008, 20:07:12 EDT
- Large Hadron Collider: And We’re Off!from PopSciThu, 7 Aug 2008, 18:35:14 EDT
- CERN's new collider to fire first beam next monthfrom AP ScienceThu, 7 Aug 2008, 17:49:10 EDT
- CERN's new collider to fire first beam next monthfrom NewsvineThu, 7 Aug 2008, 17:28:17 EDT
- Large Hadron Collider to start on Sept. 10from CBC: Technology & ScienceThu, 7 Aug 2008, 14:07:09 EDT
- Cern lab set for beam milestonefrom BBC News: Science & NatureThu, 7 Aug 2008, 13:42:11 EDT
- CERN reveals early September start-up date for LHCfrom Physics WorldThu, 7 Aug 2008, 12:35:58 EDT
- CERN announces start-up date for Large Hadron Colliderfrom PhysorgThu, 7 Aug 2008, 11:28:20 EDT
- Tim Radford on the Cern particle accelerator experimentsfrom The Guardian - ScienceWed, 6 Aug 2008, 19:42:16 EDT
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