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LHC repairs = Closer to 2012

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posted on Nov, 17 2008 @ 01:11 PM
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I don't know about you guys but the whole 2012 scare is becoming more of a reality the more I hear about the LHC.
Turns out now it will take a couple more months to repair it than previously thought. May or June of 2009 according to CERN.
I'm really beginning to think that this could be the "doomsday reason" for us. What do you think?


Yahoo News (AP)




Big particle collider repairs to cost $21 million By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS, Associated Press Writer Alexander G. Higgins, Associated Press Writer Mon Nov 17, 7:46 am ET GENEVA – Fixing the world's largest atom smasher will cost at least 25 million francs ($21 million) and may take until early summer, its operator said Monday. An electrical failure shut down the Large Hadron Collider on Sept. 19, nine days after the $10 billion machine started up with great fanfare. The European Organization for Nuclear Research recently said that the repairs would be completed by May or early June. Spokesman James Gillies said the organization know as CERN is now estimating the restart will be at the end of June or later. "If we can do it sooner, all well and good. But I think we can do it realistically (in) early summer," he said. The organization has blamed the shutdown on the failure of a single, badly soldered electrical connection. The atom smasher operates at temperatures colder than outer space to get maximum efficiency and experts needed to gradually warm the damaged section to better assess it, he said. "Now the sector is warm so they are able to go in and physically look at each of the interconnections," Gillies told The Associated Press. The cost of the work will fall within the organization's existing budget, Gillies said. The massive machine on the Swiss-French border was built to smash protons from hydrogen atoms together at high energy and record what particles are produced by the collisions, giving scientists a better idea of the makeup of the smallest components of matter. That will show on a tiny scale what happened one-trillionth of a second after the so-called Big Bang, which many scientists theorize was the massive explosion that formed the universe. The theory holds that the universe was rapidly cooling at that stage and matter was changing rapidly. Scientists have taken the setback in stride, saying that particle colliders always have such problems in the startup phase.

Associated Press writer Frank Jordans contributed to this report.


[edit on 17-11-2008 by Andre Neves]



posted on Nov, 17 2008 @ 01:34 PM
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Spokesman James Gillies said the organization know as CERN is now estimating the restart will be at the end of June or later. "If we can do it sooner, all well and good. But I think we can do it realistically (in) early summer," he said.


It'll be back online by 2009. 2009 is three years from 2012.
The actual experiment itself occurs in our atmosphere several hundreds of times daily, ad the only new thing about this one is it's bigger. Yeesh.



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