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Big Bang at the atomic lab after scientists get their maths wrong
Times Online ^ | 4/8/07 | Jonathan Leake

Posted on 04/08/2007 8:55:49 AM PDT by LibWhacker

A £2 billion project to answer some of the biggest mysteries of the universe has been delayed by months after scientists building it made basic errors in their mathematical calculations.

The mistakes led to an explosion deep in the tunnel at the Cern particle accelerator complex near Geneva in Switzerland. It lifted a 20-ton magnet off its mountings, filling a tunnel with helium gas and forcing an evacuation.

It means that 24 magnets located all around the 17-mile circular accelerator must now be stripped down and repaired or upgraded. The failure is a huge embarrassment for Fermilab, the American national physics laboratory that built the magnets and the anchor system that secured them to the machine.

It appears Fermilab made elementary mistakes in the design of the magnets and their anchors that made them insecure once the system was operational.

Last week an apparently furious and embarrassed Pier Oddone, director of Fermilab, wrote to his staff saying they had caused “a pratfall on the world stage”. He said: “We are dumb-founded that we missed some very simple balance of forces. Not only was it missed in the engineering design but also in the four engineering reviews carried out between 1998 and 2002 before launching the construction of the magnets.”

The machine, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), aims to recreate the conditions of the Big Bang, when the universe is thought to have exploded into existence about 14 billion years ago. However, the November start-up may now have to be delayed until next spring.

Dr Lyn Evans, who leads the accelerator construction project at Cern, the European organisation for nuclear research, said the explosion had been potentially very dangerous.

“There was a hell of a bang, the tunnel housing the machine filled with helium and dust and we had to call in the fire brigade to evacuate the place,” he said. “The people working on the test were frightened to death but they were all in a safe place so no-one was hurt.” An investigation by Cern researchers found “fundamental” flaws that caused the explosion, close to the CMS detector, one of the LHC’s most important experiments.

The accelerator is designed to smash together protons, a kind of sub-atomic particle, at near light speed. The hope is that such collisions will generate exotic new particles — especially the so-called Higgs boson which, theorists predict, could help explain key properties of matter, such as how it acquires mass and, hence, weight.

The LHC itself comprises two pipes, each containing a beam of protons travelling at near-light speed that are steered around the circular tunnel by powerful magnets. Such magnets are “superconducting” meaning they and the whole LHC are cooled to below -268C, using pipes filled with liquid helium.

The two proton beams travel in opposite directions but, at various points around the ring, their pipes merge, allowing the protons in each beam to collide.

However, since the thickness of each beam is less than that of a human hair, they have to be focused. This is the task of a second set of magnets, and it is these that were under test at the time of the explosion.

Coincidentally, Fermilab stands to gain most from delays at Cern. Its researchers also operate a rival but less powerful particle accelerator, the Tevatron.

Fermilab staff are pushing the Tevatron to ever-higher energies hoping that they might find the Higgs boson before the LHC switches on. An LHC researcher said: “Ironically, this delay could be all they need.”


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cern; collider; explosion; fermilab; hadron; higgs; higgsboson; large; lhc; magnet; stringtheory
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To: LibWhacker
Forgot to carry the 1...DOH!


21 posted on 04/08/2007 9:31:58 AM PDT by Caipirabob (Communists... Socialists... Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
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To: wolfcreek
Lots of fiction deals with Higgs Bosons

Into the Looking Glass by John Ringo is great military scifi in the vein of Dave Drake

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgs_boson_(fiction) for the surprisingly long list of books and movies that deal with these elusive subatomic particles.

Big bang indeed!

22 posted on 04/08/2007 9:32:12 AM PDT by ASOC (Yeah, well, maybe - but can you *prove* it?)
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To: Barnacle

They made the same mistake a few thousand years ago when they built the first Enki Accelerator. We see the remains of that lab at Stonehenge.


23 posted on 04/08/2007 9:32:47 AM PDT by Eastbound
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To: LibWhacker

Newton will not be denied.


24 posted on 04/08/2007 9:33:01 AM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: LibWhacker

That’s why you need a competent outside test organization.


25 posted on 04/08/2007 9:34:00 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets ("We will have peace with the Arabs when they love their children more than they hate us.")
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To: Vaduz
What I want to know is, why can't the Euroweenies make their own damned magnets?
Lot's of unemployed aviation types right now.

Just saying.

26 posted on 04/08/2007 9:35:15 AM PDT by Publius6961 (MSM: Israelis are killed by rockets; Lebanese are killed by Israelis.)
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To: LibWhacker

Modern days Tower of Babel...


27 posted on 04/08/2007 9:35:56 AM PDT by stuartcr (Everything happens as God wants it to.....otherwise, things would be different.)
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To: LibWhacker

These are the guys we’re going to trust with a ‘micro-Black Hole’?


28 posted on 04/08/2007 9:35:57 AM PDT by blam
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To: Flyer; humblegunner; Allegra; TheMom; Xenalyte; thackney; Eaker; Dashing Dasher; stevie_d_64; ...

“Oops!” Ping


29 posted on 04/08/2007 9:36:48 AM PDT by pax_et_bonum (I will always love you, Flyer.)
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To: LibWhacker
It lifted a 20-ton magnet off its mountings...

Oh, OK. Not a big explosion, then.

Calls you don't ever want to make: "Uh, boss? I got some bad news..."

30 posted on 04/08/2007 9:36:51 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: EveningStar

Tard Ping?

;-)


31 posted on 04/08/2007 9:37:14 AM PDT by pax_et_bonum (I will always love you, Flyer.)
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To: PSYCHO-FREEP

I think the magnets are used to deflect beams of charged particles, like in a CRT, only bigger and faster. The idea is to accelerate charged particles to energies comparable to the conditions near the big bang.


32 posted on 04/08/2007 9:37:45 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets ("We will have peace with the Arabs when they love their children more than they hate us.")
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To: LibWhacker

33 posted on 04/08/2007 9:38:56 AM PDT by Jason_b
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To: nnn0jeh

ping


34 posted on 04/08/2007 9:42:17 AM PDT by kalee (The offenses we give, we write in the dust; Those we take, we write in marble. JHuett)
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To: LibWhacker
Not only was it missed in the engineering design but also in the four engineering reviews carried out between 1998 and 2002 before launching the construction of the magnets.”

So there were no geniuses at CERN who noticed this either? Hard to frame that as a Fermilab conspiracy, then.

35 posted on 04/08/2007 9:43:54 AM PDT by Nevermore
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To: NonValueAdded
Imagine a crowd of workers emerging from a tunnel with the smoke roiling out behind them, all squeaking "run away" in helium voices.

That was funny..

But I am confused..

“The people working on the test were frightened to death but they were all in a safe place so no-one was hurt.”

How can no one be hurt, yet everyone working there were frightened to death?

36 posted on 04/08/2007 9:44:11 AM PDT by Experiment 6-2-6 (Admn Mods: tiny, malicious things that glare and gibber from dark corners.They have pins and dolls..)
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To: Billthedrill

... in a really squeeky helium voice...


37 posted on 04/08/2007 9:46:14 AM PDT by patton (19yrs ... only 4,981yrs to go ;))
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To: wolfcreek
Actually, antimatter is created all the time and are indeed used in some colliders as one of two of the colliding beams. The collisions themselves give off antimatter.... The quantities in either case are insufficient to case any damage.

My brother used to work at Fermi Lab so we’ve talked. At that time he thought that the world, in total, had produced about 1x10-5 grams of antimatter; mostly positrons and antiprotons.

If you’re interested: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiproton

38 posted on 04/08/2007 9:48:24 AM PDT by Freeport
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets

In other words, Gravity.......

Without the Universal force of gravity, there would be NO acceleration of anything.


39 posted on 04/08/2007 9:48:41 AM PDT by PSYCHO-FREEP
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To: NonValueAdded
Imagine a crowd of workers emerging from a tunnel with the smoke roiling out behind them, all squeaking "run away" in helium voices.

The workers then broke out in a spontanious song:

We represent the Lollipop Guild
The Lollipop Guild, the Lollipop Guild
And in the name of the Lollipop Guild
We wish to welcome you to Munchkin Land

40 posted on 04/08/2007 9:49:01 AM PDT by Mike Darancette (Democrat Happens!)
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