‘Big Bang Machine’ fizzling out because of faulty magnets
August 4th, 2009 - 1:02 pm ICT by ANI
Washington, August 4 (ANI): The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), or the ‘Big Bang Machine’, as it is popularly called, is fizzling out, as many of the magnets meant to whiz subatomic particles around the 17-mile underground machine outside Geneva have mysteriously lost their ability to operate at high energies.
According to a report in New York Times, after 15 years and 9 billion dollars, and a showy “switch-on” ceremony last September, the LHC, the giant particle accelerator outside Geneva, has to yet collide any particles at all, thanks to thousands of bad electrical connections.
The collider’s own prodigious energies are in some way its worst enemy.
In order to carry enough current, the collider’s superconducting magnets are cooled by liquid helium to a temperature of 1.9 degrees above absolute zero, at which point the niobium-titanium cables in them lose all electrical resistance and become superconducting.
Any perturbation, however, such as a bad soldering job on a splice, can cause resistance and heat the cable and cause it to lose its superconductivity in what physicists call a “quench”, which is what happened on September 19 last year, when the junction between two magnets vaporized in a shower of sparks, soot and liberated helium.
Technicians have spent most of the last year cleaning up and inspecting thousands of splices in the collider.
About 5,000 will have to be redone, according to Steve Myers, head of CERN’s accelerator division.
Before the superconducting magnets are installed, engineers “train” each one by ramping up its electrical current until the magnet fails, or “quenches”. Thus, the magnet gradually grows comfortable with higher and higher current.
According to Dr. Myers, all of the magnets for the collider were trained to an energy above seven trillion electron volts before being installed, but when engineers tried to take one of the rings’ eight sectors to a higher energy last year, some magnets unexpectedly failed.
Lucio Rossi, head of magnets for CERN, said that 49 magnets had lost their training in the sectors tested and that it was impossible to estimate how many in the entire collider had gone bad.
He said the magnets in question had all met specifications and that the problem might stem from having sat outside for a year before they could be installed.
Experts say that retraining magnets is costly and time consuming, and it might not be worth the wait to get all the way to the original target energy.
“It looks like we can get to 6.5 relatively easily,” Dr. Myers said, but seven trillion electron volts would require “a lot of training.” (ANI)
- 'Big Bang Machine' experiment successful: CERN - Mar 30, 2010
- Large Hadron Collider performing well - Mar 09, 2010
- Large Hadron Collider gets warning system upgrade - Sep 29, 2009
- Large Hadron Collider may start collisions by Christmas - Aug 08, 2009
- Design flaws may have doomed the "Big Bang Machine" - Feb 24, 2010
- Large Hadron Collider sets new beam intensity record - Apr 23, 2011
- Particle beams successfully injected into "Big Bang Machine" - Oct 27, 2009
- "Big Bang" machine becomes colder than deep space - Oct 17, 2009
- Giant particle smasher to restart at half its designed energy - Aug 07, 2009
- Large Hadron Collider gets research programme cracking - Mar 31, 2010
- LHC sets new beam collision record - Jun 28, 2010
- LHC to be run for an extra yr to find the Higgs particle - Dec 11, 2010
- Large Hadron Collider Develops Snag, Collisions Takes Place Beyond Schedule - Mar 30, 2010
- Big Bang Machine to re-start in October - Feb 10, 2009
- CERN declares LHC will run till 2012 - Feb 01, 2011
Tags: absolute zero, accelerator division, bang machine, cern, electrical connections, electrical resistance, electron volts, hadron collider, higher energy, large hadron, lhc, liquid helium, new york times, particle accelerator, perturbation, redone, splices, steve myers, subatomic particles, superconducting magnets