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m3t00🌎M to science@lemmy.worldEnglish • 1 year ago

How the Large Hadron Collider's successor will hunt for the dark universe

www.space.com

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How the Large Hadron Collider's successor will hunt for the dark universe

www.space.com

m3t00🌎M to science@lemmy.worldEnglish • 1 year ago
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CERN has revealed plans for the Future Circular Collider, which will dwarf the Large Hadron Collider in size and power and hunt for the missing 95% of our universe.
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  • mr_robot
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    20•1 year ago

    Remember how nut-jobs were convinced that using the LHC would create an earth-eating black hole? I miss the simpler times.

    Uneducated conspiracy theorists seemed laughably quaint back in 2012.

    • deweydecibel
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      5•
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      1 year ago

      2012? The LHC black hole shit was the mid 2000s, around 2008 is when it peaked.

      Which itself was a repeat of the same concerns that were thrown around in 2003, when CERN thoroughly debunked them the first time.

      And I have full confidence we’ll see a return of them once this project gets closer to fruition.

  • @ClockworkOtter@lemmy.world
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    6•1 year ago

    Imagine designing this thing that probably won’t be completed until you’re dust!

    • @Marcbmann@lemmy.world
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      5•1 year ago

      Then you can get accelerated in the thing you designed.

    • @deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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      4•1 year ago

      How cathedral architects must feel.

  • @owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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    5•
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    1 year ago

    Instead of building it this big, they should build it as big as the following one will be.

    • Chris
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      6•1 year ago

      Instead of building it that big, they should build it as big as the following one after the following one will be.

      • @sorghum@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Build it along the equator

        • @not_woody_shaw@lemmy.world
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          2•1 year ago

          Build it in orbit around the sun.

          • @Socket462@feddit.it
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            3•1 year ago

            Here it is the comment I was looking for. Another fellow three body problem reader, I suppose.

      • @Hule@lemmy.world
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        1•1 year ago

        But where’s the fun in that?

  • @TheBiscuitLout@lemmy.world
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    5•1 year ago

    Is it by smashing stuff together until they break something fundamental, and the universe goes dark?

    • @pacmondo@sh.itjust.works
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      4•1 year ago

      Whoops, blew the galactic breaker. Somebody has to go down to the supermassive black hole and flip it back on.

      • @not_woody_shaw@lemmy.world
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        2•1 year ago

        I’m sure Mehdi can find it for us.

  • @Gork@lemm.ee
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    3•1 year ago

    Are the two intersecting to give scientists the option of transferring from one collider to the other? If so, why intersect at two points (they overlap a little) instead of just one (at a single tangent point)?

    • @Fermion@mander.xyz
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      1 year ago

      https://www.cern/science/accelerators/accelerator-complex

      Yes, the maximum energy that a syncrotron can accelerate a beam to is determined by its size and field strength. There are multiple rings that are used to bring beams up in energy levels before feeding to the next. Each ring has many bunches of particles circulating. So each bunch has to be going close to the same speed. You wouldn’t want to do all the accelerating in one ring because it wouldn’t allow nearly continuous operation.

      As for two intersecting points, the collisions involve colliding two beams. So there’s two different kicking/injecting points one for each direction.

      https://cds.cern.ch/record/2002005/files/CERN-ACC-2015-030.pdf

  • @jenny_ball@lemmy.world
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    1•1 year ago

    how much will this cost?

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