Particle collisions at record energies will push the boundary of human knowledge
ByThe LHC is smashing protons together at a higher energy than ever before.
The highest-energy collisions ever seen at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) are now producing data for science.
Teams at CERN, Europe's particle-physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, have spent two years upgrading what was already the world’s most powerful particle accelerator. At 10.40 local time on June 3 they officially set the newly supercharged collider running.
Physicists can now smash together bunches of protons at a record energy of 13 teraelectronvolts (TeV) and will soon collide a billion pairs of protons per second—almost double the previous rate. The machine was switched off on 14 February 2013 after an initial period—dubbed run 1—marked by .
The first beams of protons following the shutdown in early April, but at low energies. Since then, physicists have worked to check mechanisms designed to protect the machine and to calibrate the beams, before increasing the LHC's energy and bringing its four main experiments fully online.
When protons collide, part of their energy is converted into mass, creating showers of new particles. Physicists hope that the extra firepower of the upgraded LHC will the best description of fundamental particles and their interactions that scientists have right now. This could allow them to answer long-standing questions that this model cannot explain, such as , and why the Higgs boson, discovered at the lab in 2012, is inexplicably light.
A popular theory known as supersymmetry could provide an explanation for these questions, but data from the LHC's first run . More data and higher-energy collisions could provide evidence for more-complex versions.
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