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LHC down until late summer 2009 or early 2010 |
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| Nov25-08, 10:54 AM | #1 |
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LHC down until late summer 2009 or early 2010
Peter Woit provides this link to a talk at CERN
http://indico.cern.ch/getFile.py/acc...s&confId=22937 Slide 46 indicates that restart will not occur until late summer 2009 (Plan A) or sometime in 2010 (Plan B) The talk was given today by Jörg Wenninger. Wenninger's slides are well-illustrated with photos and diagrams, including labeled shots of the components where problems developed, and provide the clearest explanation which I have seen so far of the unfortunate event in section 34 of the ring. By way of summary, here's what slide 46 says: ==quote== Plans for 2009 Plan A: • Restart in (late) summer of 2009 beam with beam. • Beam intensity and energy limited to minimize any risk. Plan B: • No beam before a complete ‘upgrade’ of the pressure-relief system is implemented sectors on all sectors. • Excludes beam in 2009. Final decision in February? 46 ==endquote== So we may know in February, if a decision is made about completing the upgrade and scheduling restart. This and other news/comment here: http://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/?p=1290 |
| Nov29-08, 11:09 AM | #2 |
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The incoming DG has said that the CERN management team are going to give the highest priority to beam in 2009, which means that plan B is out of the window. Of course, this has not been officially ratified, but it does make sense...
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| Nov29-08, 06:01 PM | #3 |
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| Nov30-08, 02:47 AM | #4 |
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LHC down until late summer 2009 or early 2010
6 months certainly matters to the grad students!
First, "Plan B" never appeared on anything official by CERN. It was a talk at one of the experiment's meetings by someone who works on the accelerator, but not an official statement by the LHC. In fact, on slide 43 of the Wenninger talk, he specifically excludes Plan B himself. Of course, few people paid attention to this aspect. Second, the experiments have long since crossed the point where cosmic ray commissioning is almost as good as beam commissioning. Both large experiments have demonstrated that they can take look cosmic ray runs, analyze the results, and use them productively. What they haven't been able to do is look at "full" events, nor have they been able to run at full speed. Third, the Wenninger talk makes it sound like under Plan B there will not be a limit to beam intensity and energy. This is almost certainly not the case. Until there is more experience with the LHC, particularly with unintentional fill terminations, there is likely to be some sort of limit. The first six months are the first six months, no matter where they fall on a calendar. So it's in everybody's best interest to start as soon as possible. A run of 100 pb-1 in 2009 would allow some search physics to move past the Tevatron's reach, and some physics to be comparable (for example, the number of top quarks would be about 1/3 of what is seen at CDF or D0). They won't do everything, but this sounds to me like a good start. |
| Nov30-08, 10:49 AM | #5 |
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| Nov30-08, 10:57 AM | #6 |
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We have reached as far as we can go with cosmics commissioning really from a physics standpoint (small event sizes, no realistic E/gamma triggers, top / bottom timing differences etc), although there are still clear areas where software needs improving. Anyway, my point is there's a big curve before we get useful physics data out. But, that 100pb would allow us to at least intercalibrate the detectors (you get enough Zs to begin to do useful things), and perform studies of jet multiplicities, pT spectra etc. I'd like useful physics to come out of the first 100pb as much as the next person, but I think there has to be a reality check at some point. |
| Nov30-08, 01:31 PM | #7 |
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Mentor
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| Nov30-08, 02:21 PM | #8 |
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Measurement of the W-boson mass in 1.8-TeV p̅ p collisions Measurement of σB(W→eν) and σB(Z0→e+e-) in p̅ p collisions at sqrt[s] =1800 GeV Measurement of QCD jet broadening in pp̅ collisions at sqrt[s] =1.8 TeV Topology of three-jet events in p̅ p collisions at sqrt[s] =1.8 TeV Properties of events with large total transverse energy produced in proton-antiproton collisions at sqrt[s] =1.8 TeV Limit on the top-quark mass from proton-antiproton collisions at sqrt[s] =1.8 TeV Which is pretty much 'rediscovery of SM' type stuff, what we expect to be doing too. This fits in with my "and perform studies of jet multiplicities, pT spectra etc." comment. Of course, we can't discovery anything until we rediscover what we (think) we know, so this is a critical step, it's just that I don't think any radical physics will come out of a small* run. Of course, I'd love there to be - my channel of interest, in certain models, is a fantastic first data channel, but one shouldn't get too excited; we have large mounds to climb. In any case, it's a rather exciting time to be involved. * Where small is undefined |
| Dec20-08, 02:27 AM | #9 |
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Blog Entries: 59
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For anyone interested, here's the timetable to restart-
http://press.web.cern.ch/press/Press...LHCrestart.pdf and the associated press release dated 5th December- http://press.web.cern.ch/press/Press.../PR17.08E.html |
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