Take a 360-Degree Tour Inside the Large Hadron Collider
Some 300 feet below the France–Switzerland border is the largest machine in the world, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).
There, particles are sent careening at each other in a 17-mile loop at speeds that approach the speed of light. It’s there that the Higgs boson (sometimes called the “God particle”) was discovered in 2012. With the LHC, physicists create conditions similar to those after the Big Bang, study the fundamental building blocks of the universe, and search for clues in the hunt for the collective White Whale of astrophysics: dark energy and dark matter.
BBC News was able to get inside for a firsthand look at CERN’s digs, and now you can too with a 360-degree view of what they call the largest particle physics laboratory in the world. It’s a rare glimpse at the machinery behind cutting-edge discoveries that are unlocking some major secrets of the universe. Or, as the narrator says: “This is big science performed on the tiniest of scales.”
Take a look now, because a new discovery may be on the horizon: The detection of extra photons during a recent particle collision in the LHC has some speculating that these unexpected flashes of light are evidence of a new particle—perhaps a cousin to the Higgs boson or even a graviton, the still-hypothetical particle that may transmit gravity.
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