
By Katie Yurkewicz
Among the 10,000 people from around the world who
are working on the Large Hadron Collider, 1000 hail
from universities and national labs in the United States.
The Large Hadron Collider is the world’s next-generation
particle accelerator. Arguably the most ambitious scientific
endeavor ever undertaken, the $8.7 billion project at
CERN, the European particle physics lab in Geneva,
Switzerland, has been in the works for more than two
decades. When it begins operating in mid-2008, scientists
predict that its very-high-energy collisions will yield
extraordinary discoveries about the nature of the
physical universe.
The LHC project has two equally important aspects: the
collider itself and its six particle detectors, each one a
self-contained experiment. The collider, nearing completion
in a 27-kilometer ring deep below the Swiss-French border,
will accelerate two beams of protons in opposite directions
to a whisker below the speed of light. For most of their
split-second journey around the ring, these hair-thin beams
will travel in separate vacuum pipes; but at four points,
in the hearts of the main experiments, they will collide at
energies of 14 trillion electronvolts. These massive experiments—huge both in size and in worldwide participation—are known by their acronyms: ALICE, ATLAS, CMS, and
LHCb. They are the tools physicists will use to turn particle
collisions into scientific breakthroughs.
Building the LHC and its experiments has required the
efforts of some 10,000 scientists, engineers, technicians,
and students from almost 60 nations. More than 1000 of
these hail from 93 universities and national laboratories
in the United States. Researchers from US institutions have
made vital contributions to all aspects of LHC construction,
and are now looking forward to the next phase, when they
will see collisions begin, watch data start flowing, and spend
many a sleepless night searching for the tracks of particles
whose existence would transform our understanding of the
universe.
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The heart of the LHC project is the collider itself, and the
heart of the collider is a series of thousands of superconducting
magnets. They create the extremely high
magnetic fields needed to accelerate particles to high
energies, guide them in circles, and focus them for collision.
Such fields are possible today only with superconducting
technology, which requires that the magnets be cooled to
nearly absolute zero—colder than outer space—by superfluid
helium.
The LHC’s particle collisions will reach energies
seven times higher than those achieved at Fermi National
Accelerator Laboratory’s Tevatron, the most powerful particle
collider operating to date. Building a machine capable
of reaching those energies has proved a formidable task; now, with LHC construction almost complete, focus has
turned to testing, cooling, testing again, and preparing to
accelerate beams.
“The LHC is ten times bigger than the Tevatron,” says
LHC Project Leader Lyn Evans from CERN. “Every step of
the way has been challenging: getting it approved, getting
the hardware solid, getting through budget crises, handling
technical difficulties, and now getting the whole thing to
work together.”
Physicists hope the LHC’s experiments will reveal new
worlds of unknown particles and explain why those particles
exist and behave as they do. Scientists will also search
for the origins of mass, study the universe as it existed
shortly after the big bang, and try to uncover hidden symmetries
of the universe and extra dimensions of space.
The two biggest LHC experiments are ATLAS and
CMS. ATLAS, measuring 148 feet long, 82 feet wide, and
82 feet high is the largest, while CMS, weighing in at
13,000 tons, is the heaviest. Each involves approximately
2000 physicists from some 35 countries. These scientists
will search for new particles and phenomena, measure
the properties of previously discovered quarks and bosons
with unprecedented precision, and be on the lookout for
completely unexpected physics.
“The most exciting discoveries are the ones you don’t
anticipate,” says CERN theoretical physicist John Ellis.
“People looked into the first microscope and saw a whole
new world of bacteria that they didn’t know existed. It
could be that way again.”
The 1000-member ALICE collaboration will use collisions
of lead ions to study the quark-gluon plasma, a state
of matter that existed just after the big bang. The ALICE
detector may also provide vital information about run-of-the-mill proton collisions in the early days of LHC operation,
paving the way for physicists with the ATLAS and CMS
experiments to identify unusual collisions that may reveal
new physics.
The aim of the LHCb experiment is to measure rare
decays of B mesons—particles containing a bottom quark.
Such decays happen very rarely in the familiar world of
observed particles, but more frequently in scenarios such
as supersymmetry, in which every particle has a heavier
superpartner. If LHCb’s 600 scientists find these decays,
it could be the first evidence of new physics phenomena.
“If you compare the LHC to an earthquake, ATLAS
and CMS may produce something that shatters our
understanding of the universe—a really big earthquake,”
explains Ellis. “But earthquakes often have tremors
that precede them and tell you something big is coming.
LHCb could generate such tremors.”
On a much smaller scale are the LHCf and TOTEM
experiments. Built around the ATLAS and CMS collision
points, respectively, these experiments have very specific
aims. The 21-member LHCf experiment will contribute to the
understanding of ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays that bombard
the Earth. The 80-member TOTEM experiment will
measure particles flying off at very small angles from the
LHC’s proton-proton collisions, allowing scientists to study
physical processes that can’t otherwise be explored.
With their part in LHC construction almost complete, US
scientists from institutions in 30 states and Puerto Rico,
supported by the US Department of Energy’s Office of
Science and by the National Science Foundation, prepare
to play key roles in the discoveries to come. These
scientists and students may make their contributions
from the United States, travel to CERN for short periods,
or live at CERN full time.
“US particle physicists want to do the best science, no
matter where the facilities may be,” says Fermilab’s Joel
Butler, program manager for US participation in CMS.
“Institutions in the US will further increase their level of
involvement over the next few years, and pretty soon the
LHC could be what most US particle physicists will be
working on.”
During the last dozen years, US scientists have helped
build the LHC experiments’ complex detectors and their
intricate computing systems. They are now focused on
testing and preparing for startup, and will soon be operating
the detectors and analyzing the data as it emerges.
Graduate students play a vital role; they often spend
several years doing research at their home universities
before moving to CERN to gain hands-on experience.
“There are probably about 100 people from US ATLAS
institutions at CERN now,” says Columbia University’s
Michael Tuts, project manager for US ATLAS. “We expect
that to ramp up, but it depends on the reality of funding
and budgets. It’s more expensive to send people to CERN,
and institutions have had to adjust budgets at home.”
One way to increase international collaboration while
keeping costs down is through remote monitoring and
operations. This year saw the opening of the LHC@FNAL
Remote Operations Center, through which scientists at
Fermilab can monitor conditions at the CMS experiment
and the LHC accelerator and participate in high-definition
videoconferences with colleagues at CERN.
“We’ve been pioneers in remote operations,” says Butler.
“We’re separated from CERN by many thousands of miles
of ocean and six to nine time zones. This will keep a part
of the US community that can’t easily go to CERN—due
to funding limitations or academic, professional, or family
responsibilities—more engaged in the experiment.”
The US contributed to the construction of the LHC
accelerator through a $200 million project funded by the
DOE’s Office of Science. More than 100 accelerator scientists
are already involved in research and development
for future LHC upgrades.
The detectors are nearly complete, the global computing
system is almost ready, and parts of the collider are
already cooled to nearly absolute zero. After more than
two decades of preparation, the LHC will produce its first
proton collisions in 2008. Excitement is growing among
US scientists, their colleagues, and the rest of the world.
“I would like to be in the ATLAS control room at the right
time to see that very first collision,” says Columbia’s Tuts.
“Seeing everything finally working together will make all
those plane trips worth it.”
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