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posted by mrpg on Sunday November 18 2018, @04:56PM   Printer-friendly
from the cheap dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

China unveils design for $5 billion particle smasher

The center of gravity in high energy physics could move to Asia if either of two grand plans is realized. At a workshop here last week, Chinese scientists unveiled the full conceptual design for the proposed Circular Electron Positron Collider (CEPC), a $5 billion machine to tackle the next big challenge in particle physics: studying the Higgs boson. (Part of the design was published in the summer.) Now, they’re ready to develop detailed plans, start construction in 2022, and launch operations around 2030—if the Chinese government agrees to fund it.

Meanwhile, Japan’s government is due to decide by the end of December whether to host an equally costly machine to study the Higgs, the International Linear Collider (ILC). How Japan’s decision might affect China’s, which is a few years away, is unclear. But it seems increasingly likely that most of the future action around the Higgs will be in Asia. Proposed “Higgs factories” in Europe are decades away and the United States has no serious plans.

The Higgs boson, key to explaining how other particles gain mass, was discovered at CERN, the European particle physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, in 2012—more than 40 years after being theoretically predicted. Now, scientists want to confirm the particle’s properties, how it interacts with other particles, and whether it contributes to dark matter. Having only mass but no spin and no charge, the Higgs is really a “new kind of elementary particle” that is both “a special part of the standard model” and a “harbinger of some profound new principles,” says Nima Arkani-Hamed, a theorist at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. Answering the most important questions in particle physics today “involves studying the Higgs to death,” he says.


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  • (Score: 2) by suburbanitemediocrity on Sunday November 18 2018, @05:29PM (2 children)

    by suburbanitemediocrity (6844) on Sunday November 18 2018, @05:29PM (#763554)

    collider before going up a few orders of magnitude in size?

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 18 2018, @05:33PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 18 2018, @05:33PM (#763557)

    If you want your budget to continue to grow you need to keep moving the goalposts.

  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Monday November 19 2018, @09:15AM

    by FatPhil (863) <pc-soylentNO@SPAMasdf.fi> on Monday November 19 2018, @09:15AM (#763825) Homepage
    Possibly the last hadron collider. However, there have long been plans for e-e+ colliders with a similar energy to LHC. Electrons are harder to pump as much energy into, as they're lighter. However, you get cleaner collisions from them, as you're not smashing bags of varied, and perhaps virtual, quarks at each other. E.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Linear_Collider
    --
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