PARIS: The Large Hadron Collider has finished its maintenance cycle after a short circuit delayed its reactivation earlier this month, paving a way for its reactivation and its return to particle physics experiments early next week.
The particle of metal responsible for the short was melted with a blast of high electrical current, clearing the massive 27 kilometer circumference particle collider to send protons blasting around at unimaginable speeds once more. It’s been two years since the LHC was deactivated in order to upgrade its systems to provide even more high-energy particle collisions, and now with this last problem hurdled scientists at CERN say that only a few routine tests need to be carried out before it’s spun up to its new full speed.
One of the particle accelerator’s incredibly powerful electromagnets was infiltrated by the piece of metal debris, causing the short in the electronics attached to the magnet. The fault itself is a highly common one, but thanks to the magnet being supercooled to almost absolute zero engineers had been fearful that clearing the short might have to take weeks to warm the magnet up enough to perform maintenance and then re-cool it to operating temperatures. However, the short was able to be cleared remotely instead, obviating the need to send maintenance crews down in person – and to delay startup even further.
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