World's Largest Supercooled Magnet Activated
An anonymous reader writes to mention a C|Net article about the activation of the world's largest superconducting electromagnet. Switched on today at Geneva's CERN lab, the experiment is part of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) project. The magnet, called ATLAS, worked on its first start up. From the article: "In use, the magnet will be used to bend the paths of particles formed from the collision of protons or lead ions accelerated to near light speeds in 27km diameter subterranean contra-rotating circular beams. The ATLAS experiment is one of five in the LHC, and engages 1,800 scientists from 165 universities and laboratories in 35 countries."
And every single magnetic based media for ten miles was instantly erased.
A faint "bwa ha ha ha... vhs tapes and floppy disks suck!" was heard from from the evil scientists' lair.
The original team working on this tried to load the software from floppies.
init 11 - for when you need that edge.
IANAPP (particle physicist), but bending the particles' path is often done to determine mass: heavier particles will be pulled off their course less than lighter particles, so they'll impact the detector in a different place.
The magnet needs supercooling because a huge magnetic field is easier to achieve with a superconductor than with a conventional magnet.
This was once featured on slashdot and for those confused, this is just a part of the world largest (longest) particle accelerator thing and one of the purposes of this huge facility is to generate small blackholes.
/ Spotlight/SpotlightATLAS-en.html
http://public.web.cern.ch/Public/Content/Chapters
We need to bend the particles path so we can measure its momentum. A charged particle in an magnetic field will have a radius of curvature inversely proportional to the magnetic field and proportional to its momentum, with opposite charged particles curving in different ways. The radius of curvature decreases as the magnetic field increases and increases as the momentum of the particle increases. So for very high momentum particles, the radius of curvature is very large so the particle travels in almost a straight line which makes it very difficult to measure the radius of curvature. Hence you increase the magnetic field to force the particle to "bend" more and make it easier to measure the amount of "bending". So you want as big as magnetic field as possible and at the moment superconducting magnets give the most powerfull fields.
Here, have a look at this picture of a particle physics event (not from ATLAS but CDF at the Tevatron but the idea is the same). Lines in the circle are particle tracks, the two pink ones are very high momentum charged particles (in this case electrons). Notice how they are straight. As such we dont have a very good measurement of their momentum. The other grey lines are low momentum particles as they bend a lot since the radius of curvature is small.
Why do we want to measure the momentum of a particle? Well the Higgs boson (if it exists) will decay to 4 muons (basically heavy electrons) (nb: the Higgs can decay to other stuff but for a heavy higgs this is the cleanest signature and will be how its discovered). You want to measure the momentum of these muons and from that you can measure the mass of the particle that produced them. If you get a lot of events at a certain mass above what you expect from background, you've just discovered a new particle, likely to be the Higgs.
> why do we need to bend the particles path
/ AskAnExpert/LHC-en.html
/ AskAnExpert/LHC-en.html
r
I am not a particule physicist, but the particules need be accelerated and are 'pushed' by the magnets before being collided, so they need to circulate many times around the accelerator in order to get sufficient speed.
"A beam might circulate for 10 hours, travelling more that 10 billion kilometres, enough to get to the planet Neptune and back again. At near light-speed, a proton in the LHC will make 11 245 circuits every second."
What is the LHC power consumption?
It is around 120 MW which corresponds more or less to the power consumption for households in the Canton (State) of Geneva."
http://public.web.cern.ch/Public/Content/Chapters
> why does the magnet need to be super cooled?
To magnets are used also to maintain the beam within its path, and the requires huge amount of energy to create a magnetic field that is strong enough to prevent the beam to escape. These magnets are using a massive amount of power, and must be cooled down (a lot) do reduce their electrical resistance down to supraconductivity.
"In order to cool the magnets down to -193.16 C (pre-cooling), 10 080 tonnes of liquid nitrogen will be used. Afterwards, the refrigerators turbines will bring the helium temperature down to -268.7 C and fill the magnets with almost 60 tonnes of liquid helium. Once the magnets are filled, the refrigeration units will bring the temperature down to -271.3 C by lowering the saturation pressure - and therefore the temperature - of the liquid helium in a heat exchanger in contact with the static pressurized helium of the magnets' cold masses."
http://public.web.cern.ch/Public/Content/Chapters
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_Hadron_Collide
For reference, the LHC will also use a massive computing Grid: http://www.cern.ch/LCG/
Romain.
How do you shutdown the magnet without destroying it? According to my rough calculation, it stores energy equivalent to about 500 kg of TNT.
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
aaahhh... that would be the reason they switched to chip-and-pin instead of the magnetic strip on European credit cards. Now it all makes sense!
Warhammer forums
Actually, no. The LHA is not a cyclotron. In a cyclotron, the particles travel in a spiral, in an area sandwiched between two huge electromagnets. The size of the magnet limits the size of the cyclotron.
The LHA consists of a tube running through a series of magnets, a bit like a linear accelerator. The tube is bent into a circle so you can have the particles do multiple laps around the accelerator to increase their energy.
How's this for size? ATLAS calorimeter, the tunnel, one of the tubes, the "crab", the hole, and the cavern. Bonus: They do have retina scanners!
I always think of this toy we bought our cat, it's like a round disc with a tube around the edge with ping pong balls in it and a few holes in the side so kitty can chase the balls around for minutes and minutes.
I imagine a group of scientists standing at one point next to the tube with a hole, waiting and watching.
Task Mangler