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LHC restart scheduled for spring 2009 | Astronomy.com
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LHC restart scheduled for spring 2009

A faulty electrical connection may have caused helium leak.
Provided by CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
The LHC is the worldò??s most powerful particle accelerator. It is housed in a 17-mile tunnel that runs between Lake Geneva and the Jura mountain range.
Maximilien Brice/CERN
September 29, 2008
Investigations at CERN following a large helium leak into sector 3-4 of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) tunnel indicate that a faulty electrical connection between two of the accelerator's magnets most likely caused the incident. Before a full understanding of the leak can be established, however, the sector has to be brought to room temperature and the magnets involved opened up for inspection. This will take 3 to 4 weeks. Full details of this investigation will be made available once it is complete.

"Coming immediately after the very successful start of LHC operation on September 10, this is undoubtedly a psychological blow," said CERN Director General Robert Aymar. "Nevertheless, the success of the LHC's first operation with beam is testimony to years of painstaking preparation and the skill of the teams involved in building and running CERN's accelerator complex. I have no doubt that we will overcome this setback with the same degree of rigor and application."

The time necessary for the investigation and repairs precludes a restart before CERN's obligatory winter maintenance period, bringing the date for restart of the accelerator complex to early spring 2009. LHC beams will then follow.

Particle accelerators such as the LHC are unique machines, built at the cutting edge of technology. Each is its own prototype, and teething troubles at the start-up phase are therefore always possible.

"The LHC is a very complex instrument, huge in scale and pushing technological limits in many areas," said Peter Limon, who worked on commissioning the world's first large-scale superconducting accelerator, the Tevatron at Fermilab in Batavia, Illinois. "Events occur from time to time that temporarily stop operations, for shorter or longer periods, especially during the early phases."
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