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posted by chromas on Tuesday July 31 2018, @06:45PM   Printer-friendly

LHC accelerates its first "atoms"

Protons might be the Large Hadron Collider's bread and butter, but that doesn't mean it can't crave more exotic tastes from time to time. On Wednesday, 25 July, for the very first time, operators injected not just atomic nuclei but lead "atoms" containing a single electron into the LHC. This was one of the first proof-of-principle tests for a new idea called the Gamma Factory, part of CERN's Physics Beyond Colliders project.

"We're investigating new ideas of how we could broaden the present CERN research programme and infrastructure," says Michaela Schaumann, an LHC Engineer in Charge. "Finding out what's possible is the first step."

During normal operation, the LHC produces a steady stream of proton–proton collisions, then smashes together atomic nuclei for about four weeks just before the annual winter shutdown. But for a handful of days a year, accelerator physicists get to try something completely new during periods of machine development. Previously, they accelerated xenon nuclei in the LHC and tested other kinds of partially stripped lead ions in the SPS accelerator.

[...] Physicists are doing these tests to see if the LHC could one day operate as a gamma-ray factory. In this scenario, scientists would shoot the circulating "atoms" with a laser, causing the electron to jump into a higher energy level. As the electron falls back down, it spits out a particle of light. In normal circumstances, this particle of light would not be very energetic, but because the "atom" is already moving at close to the speed of light, the energy of the emitted photon is boosted and its wavelength is squeezed (due to the Doppler effect).

Not to be confused with mere lead ions/nuclei.

Also at Popular Mechanics.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by c0lo on Tuesday July 31 2018, @10:54PM

    by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday July 31 2018, @10:54PM (#715438) Journal

    http://alicematters.web.cern.ch/?q=FAQ-why-lead-ions [web.cern.ch]

    The full beauty of elliptical flow has now been observed again with lead lead collisions at the LHC by ALICE. The lesson learned is that when heavy ions of mass around 200 collide, the observed flow supports the picture of a dense fireball of quarks and gluons: the quark gluon plasma.
    ...
    In March 2010, in gold-gold collisions at the RHIC of more than 10 times higher energies, the thermal spectrum of fireball photons was clearly identified and a temperature of 370 MeV (approximately 4 trillion degrees Celsius) was determined. ALICE, now running at a 15 times higher energy, is able to study an even hotter photon spectrum. The Photon Spectrometer, made of lead tungstate crystals, will play a key role.

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
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