Large Hadron Collider to be shut down for a year
Thursday, 11 March 2010
The world's most expensive scientific experiment designed to discover the “God particle” and recreate the conditions that existed at the dawn of creation will be switched off for a year to correct a design problem that could break it apart if it ran on full power.
Scientists in charge of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva announced yesterday that the machine will only be able to run on half energy before it is temporarily shut down in two years' time. Its full operating capacity designed to probe the frontiers of science will not be achieved until at least 2013.
However, the European Centre for Nuclear Research (Cern), which operates the £2.6bn ‘atom smasher’ on the Franco-Swiss border, said that the additional costs of correcting the problem in the machine's copper sheaths or “stabilisers” would come out of its existing budget and it would not be asking for any additional funding from contributing countries, including Britain.
On September 19, 2008, the LHC had to be shut down just days after it was switched on for the first time because of an electrical fault that led to helium gas being accidentally released into the machine's underground tunnel. The fault took £25m to fix but Cern's engineers found that further work on the copper stabilisers designed to soak up spare electrical current from the supercooled magnets was needed before the machine could go to full energy.
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When will so many highly intelligent scientists admit that they are just wasting huge amounts of money trying to work out how the earth was created. The Holy Bible tells us and it is readily available for all to see ..... except of course who don't want to see because they would then have to realise that they will have one to answer to their creator for lives on on this earth.
Posted by Darrell Monteith | 11.03.10, 23:16 GMT
It has been predicted that time travelling forces are affecting the successfulness of this collider the sake of humanity!
Posted by Barry the baptist | 11.03.10, 14:34 GMT