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Large Hadron Collider breaks new record

- WORDS SCOTT DUTFIELD

After a three-year hiatus, the world’s most powerful particle accelerato­r is back in business and already breaking records. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) – which is operated by the European Council for Nuclear Research (CERN) – is the world’s largest particle accelerato­r and consists of a 17-mile ring of supercondu­cting magnets buried between the border of France and Switzerlan­d. The LHC uses these magnets to accelerate and smash together protons and ions to almost the speed of light, to help scientists understand particle physics, including the origin of mass, dark matter and antimatter. However, over the past three years, the LHC has been closed for maintenanc­e and repairs.

“The machines and facilities underwent major upgrades during the second long shutdown of CERN’S accelerato­r complex,” said CERN’S director for accelerato­rs and technology, Mike Lamont. “The LHC itself has undergone an extensive consolidat­ion program and will now operate at an even higher energy and, thanks to major improvemen­ts in the injector complex, it will deliver significan­tly more data to the

upgraded LHC experiment­s.” Now, beams of protons are once again circulatin­g the LHC after it reopened on 22 April, and the LHC upgrades are already paying off.

After only three days of reopening, two beams of protons were accelerate­d to a record energy level of 6.8 trillion electronvo­lts per beam. The previous record occurred during the LHC’S second run in 2015 when it reached energy levels of 6.5 TEV. This pilot run is the precursor to the third major run of the LHC, which is planned for this summer – called LHC Run 3. LHC scientists are gearing up to once again smash the new record by topping an energy output of 13.6

TEV. Along with colliding particles with greater energy, LHC scientists will collect data from more collisions than ever before.

One of the experiment­s designed to study heavy-ion collisions – called A Large Ion Collider Experiment (ALICE) – can expect a 50 times increase in the number of ion collisions it can record thanks to the latest upgrade. LHC Run 3 is expected to last for three years until 2025, when it will once again have a prolonged shutdown between 2026 and 2030.

 ?? ?? After a three-year shutdown, the LHC is once again smashing atoms together
After a three-year shutdown, the LHC is once again smashing atoms together

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