Apr 2007 - Sept 2008

The LHC Project

by Michael Hauschild (CERN)

Europe/London
OC218

OC218

Description
In a few months from now the largest ever built particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider LHC will be put into operation at the European Centre for Particle Physics CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. Protons will collide with 7x higher energies and with 100x more intensities as at the present largest collider. Development, construction and commissioning of more than 20 km superconducting magnets with over 8 T magnetic field and controlling the stored beam energy is a major challenge. Two large multi-purpose particle detectors, ATLAS and CMS, and 2 dedicated detectors, ALICE and LHCb, will record any collision products. The combination of fast and precise detectors together with robustness and radiation hardness is essential. The enormous raw data volume of 70 TeraBytes/s needs to be reduced by a factor 200'000 using efficient trigger mechanisms. The LHC data volume to be permanently stored is still about 15 PetaBytes per year. Beside hope for discovery of the long searched Higgs particle there are prospects to find physics beyond the Standard Model. If Supersymmetry exists, the lightest supersymmetric particle, if stable, is a good candidate for dark matter in the universe. LHC might also be able to discover extra dimensions and to produce microscopic black holes which would evaporate immediately due to Hawking radiation. The present status of the LHC commissioning and possible start-up scenarios will also be presented.
Slides