By
Rupert Goodwins
Friday, November 24 2006 10:27 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,61969861,00.htm
The world's largest superconducting electromagnet has been turned on
at full power for the first time. Designed as part of the Large Hadron Collider
(LHC) experiment at the international high-energy physics lab CERN in Geneva, the
ATLAS magnet worked at the first attempt.
Called the Barrel Toroid after its shape, the magnet is built from eight 5-metre
by 25-metre rectangular coils cooled to -269°C and carrying a current of 20,000 amps.
It was powered up at full strength on Nov. 9 after which the energy in the
coils, equivalent of about 10,000 cars travelling at 70km per hour, was allowed to dissipate.
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.
When fully operational in November 2007, the LHC will be the most powerful
particle accelerator ever built and will be used to investigate why particles
have mass and the nature of the as-yet undetected dark mass that's thought to
make up all but 4 percent of the universe. In particular, the
experimenters hope to detect the Higgs Boson within three years, a predicted
subatomic particle that is key to the current mainstream theories of matter.
The search for the Higgs Boson will need an immense amount of data
processing. Each day it runs, the LHC will generate around 10 terabytes of data,
which will be distributed across two worldwide computing grids, coordinated by
the
LHC Computing Project (LCG).
This system, when completed, will allow scientists at 500 different research
institutes to access all the data generated by the project.
The LHC will consume some 120 megawatts and is predicted to run for
between 15 years and 20 years. It will be rested for three months in winter
because the French power station that supplies it is needed for the domestic
grid.
CERN has an important place in the history of the internet, most famously as the birthplace of the Web.