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The Large Hadron Collider: Also the Largest, Fastest, Emptiest, Hottest, Most Complex Machine

Posted by Alex_Pasternack on Tuesday, Dec 01, 2009

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On Sunday CERN, the world’s biggest physics lab and the birthplace of this thing we call the World Wide Web, broke the world record for highest-energy proton smashing with its Large Hadron Collider. That’s right. 1.18 teraelectronvolts. Put that in your beam pipe and smoke it.

But that’s not all, folks. This underground proton racetrack, 17 miles in diameter, has racked up a whole list of superlatives — aside, of course, from biggest, most feared (to some), and most profound (to us) science experiment ever. By CERN’s own account, the Large Hadron Collider beats the US’s Tevatron, and the rest of world really, for containing:

  • The largest machine
    The precise circumference of the LHC accelerator is 26 659 m, with a total of 9300 magnets inside. Not only is the LHC the world’s largest particle accelerator, just one-eighth of its cryogenic distribution system would qualify as the world’s largest fridge. All the magnets will be pre‑cooled to -193.2°C (80 K) using 10 080 tonnes of liquid nitrogen, before they are filled with nearly 60 tonnes of liquid helium to bring them down to -271.3°C (1.9 K).
  • The fastest racetrack
    At full power, trillions of protons will race around the LHC accelerator ring 11 245 times a second, travelling at 99.99% the speed of light. Two beams of protons will each travel at a maximum energy of 7 TeV (tera-electronvolt), corresponding to head-to-head collisions of 14 TeV. Altogether some 600 million collisions will take place every second.
  • The emptiest space in the Solar System
    To avoid colliding with gas molecules inside the accelerator, the beams of particles travel in an ultra-high vacuum – a cavity as empty as interplanetary space. The internal pressure of the LHC is 10-13 atm, ten times less than the pressure on the Moon!
  • The hottest temperatures in the galaxy (and temperatures colder than outer space)
    The LHC is a machine of extreme hot and cold. When two beams of protons collide, they will generate temperatures more than 100 000 times hotter than the heart of the Sun, concentrated within a minuscule space. By contrast, the ‘cryogenic distribution system’, which circulates superfluid helium around the accelerator ring, keeps the LHC at a super cool temperature of -271.3°C (1.9 K) – even colder than outer space!
  • The biggest and most sophisticated detectors ever built
    To sample and record the results of up to 600 million proton collisions per second, physicists and engineers have built gargantuan devices that measure particles with micron precision. The LHC’s detectors have sophisticated electronic trigger systems that precisely measure the passage time of a particle to accuracies in the region of a few billionths of a second. The trigger system also registers the location of the particles to millionths of a metre. This incredibly quick and precise response is essential for ensuring that the particle recorded in successive layers of a detector is one and the same.
  • The most powerful supercomputer system
    The data recorded by each of the big experiments at the LHC will fill around 100 000 dual layer DVDs every year. To allow the thousands of scientists scattered around the globe to collaborate on the analysis over the next 15 years (the estimated lifetime of the LHC), tens of thousands of computers located around the world are being harnessed in a distributed computing network called the Grid.

At roughly $10 billion dollars — two thirds of which CERN paid, $531 million of which the US paid — it’s also the most expensive experiment ever.

Surely there are other records to be set, like smallest particle. But hottest grilled cheese sandwich? Fastest baseball pitch? Best theoretical end of the Universe? Of course, once we better fathom how the Universe was created and what underlies matter, we won’t bother worrying about world records anymore, because we’ll be living in a new era of universal consciousness and understanding and intelligence. Think of it as small repentance for that other thing CERN invented.

Catch Motherboard’s documentary on the Large Hadron Collider, look at behind-the-scenes photos and read our interview with LHC scientist Lyn Evans.

(Courtesy of CERN’s in-depth FAQ Guide (pdf); Photos: Maximilien Brice; Claudia Marcelloni, © CERN. Captions)

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Alex_Pasternack

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Email: alexp at motherboard dot tv. @pasternack,

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