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September 10, 2008 7:14 AM PDT

CERN's big collider now in action

by David Meyer

On Wednesday morning, the first particle beam was successfully sent around the full circuit of the Large Hadron Collider at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, known as CERN.

This is the very first image from the Atlas detector showing the particle beam passing through the Large Hadron Collider.

This is the very first image from Atlas showing the particle beam passing through the Large Hadron Collider.

(Credit: David Meyer/ZDNet UK)

The new science resulting from this grand experiment will turn up in the coming weeks and months, but what Wednesday's event did prove was that the world's largest machine works. Part of that machine is the cathedral-size Atlas detector, one of two general-purpose detectors (the other is the Compact Muon Solenoid, or CMS) in the LHC.

Atlas' development and construction benefited from a great amount of U.K. involvement, particularly that of the Science & Technology Facilities Council, which held an event in Westminster, England to see, via video link, the LHC being initiated. There, event attendees watched the first successful beam circulation in the LHC, which took just less than an hour to complete.

"This is the biggest high of my career so far," said Professor Jon Butterworth of University College London, who heads up the United Kingdom's involvement in the Atlas detector. "I didn't think they'd do it so quickly and smoothly."

"This is the first time (the LHC) has functioned as a single machine," Butterworth noted. He added that, although no new science as such came from Wednesday's events, the machine "shows a lot of cutting-edge technology, so in that sense, it is a breakthrough...We'll probably be getting science out of this thing for 20 years," Butterworth said.

Bicycles are a popular mode of transportation in the LHC. (To view a 14-image gallery of the LHC, click on the image above.)

(Credit: Maximilien Brice for CERN)

"We were all a bit apprehensive, but they got the first beam around in just under an hour," said Peter Barratt, communications chief of the Science & Technology Facilities Council, which distributes U.K. government funding for scientific research. "We're now looking forward to the energy ramping up." He also added that it was "mind-blowing" for particle physics to be getting the international exposure granted by coverage of the LHC.

The STFC will continue to fund the LHC through the United Kingdom's subscription to CERN and the funding of research scientists, Barratt said. "Once we start receiving the data (from the LHC), those guys need to sit down and start analyzing it," he said. "Maybe they will overturn the physics textbooks, as they are at the moment--who knows?"

"It's getting real," David Sankey, a particle physicist at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire, England, said in reaction to Wednesday's successful LHC initiation. Comparing the event to starting an engine, he said: "This is the turnover, and it went well."


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Sankey pointed out how the 20 years of development and preparation that had gone into the LHC continued right up until recently. "This has been a long time coming," he said. "Even last week, people were working in (the CMS detector). They were working flat out up to this deadline, and it worked."

One of the most important technological advances to come out of CERN's work has been its contributions to grid computing, which involves using large numbers of loosely coupled computers over a great area to share the load of handling large amounts of data. Such distributed methods are necessary for analyzing the anticipated 15 petabytes of data that are expected to come out of the LHC every year.

Imense is one company that has benefited from the U.K.'s part of the greater grid, GridPP. A spin-off from Cambridge University, Imense has used the technology to develop its content-based image search systems, which it hopes will catch on as a way to find images based on keywords, even from unannotated photographs. The company was helped in this by the STFC, which granted it use of 1 percent of GridPP.

Two company representatives were at Wednesday's event. Chris Town described the LHC initiation as "exciting," noting that all sorts of nonphysics applications are possible on the grid. David Sinclair added that projects such as the LHC "generate people with the skill set we (in companies such as Imense) need."

David Meyer of ZDNet UK reported from Westminster, England.

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by Ian Kirkland September 10, 2008 9:15 AM PDT
Of course, the RSS feed headline mentions black holes but they are mentioned anywhere in the article, as should be. As some will know, black holes are not black and are certainly not holes. They are very dense matter: so dense that light and all other matter nearby are sucked in, a kind of uber-gravity. The LHC cannot create black holes, per se.
Reply to this comment
by Michichael September 10, 2008 9:47 AM PDT
Ian. No. No, no no. Black holes are not super dense. Nor are they black, they're actually the brightest thing in the galaxy (particles are ionized as they get pulled in). The large black holes do have a large mass and gravitational field that is proportional to that mass under the standard law of gravity.

We've already CREATED black holes.

http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Possible_black_hole_created_in_US

That experiment is the basis for the black hole creation theory at the LHC.

Yes, black holes will be created, however you'd need a black hole on the mass of Mount Everest to be able to draw in enough mass to fuel the mass-energy-mass conversion that is going to occur, without using itself as fuel. The mass-energy-mass conversion takes mass from this dimension, converts it to pure energy, then condenses it back to mass in another dimension, with the side effect of Hawkings thermal radiation in this dimension.

Please stop talking about things you don't understand. These black holes will consume themselves, they don't have the mass to draw in and consume anything else. They don't have some super gravitational force. It's energy based. Stop.
Reply to this comment
by ed-209 September 10, 2008 11:49 AM PDT
Lets hope they discover something amazing or I think ill ask for my money back to give to the starving and homeless.
Reply to this comment
by sccpa September 10, 2008 12:49 PM PDT
ed...you're a ******. Staving and homeless people are just lazy a-holes.
by skillingssucks September 10, 2008 2:34 PM PDT
Yeah, I'm sure your $6/hour salary really contributed a lot.
by Sweetpatootie September 10, 2008 3:36 PM PDT
Give it time! LOL!
Reply to this comment
by Sweetpatootie September 10, 2008 3:42 PM PDT
Come to think of it, is there any PRACTICAL reason for spending money on this thing???
Reply to this comment
by David Gerard September 10, 2008 4:14 PM PDT
@Sweetpatootie: Of course there is! It supplies material for off-colour jokes around unfortunate typos of "hadron". http://tinyurl.com/6nhwlu

More seriously: they said exactly that about the discovery of the electron 100 years ago. Of course, your comment may prove it was a bad idea.
Reply to this comment
by Sweetpatootie September 10, 2008 4:36 PM PDT
LOL! You may have a point David. Personally I am immediately suspicious of anything that has 'hardon' in it's name!
by catwizel September 10, 2008 4:21 PM PDT
We once throught the world was flat and yet it took brave sols to prove otherwise to the world under great scrutiny from there piers and this is now different this is what make our spices so great the wiliness to discover and query our existence and yet we have made grave mistake during this time and yes there are staving people around the world but give our discovers time and we will evolve and rectify these problem with time so site back and enjoy the journey of evolution.
Reply to this comment
by 445123 September 10, 2008 9:12 PM PDT
so how long will this machine run ? forever
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