Downed Hadron Collider faces $21M in repairs

18.11.2008
Fixing problems at the world's largest particle collider won't come cheap.

James Gillies, a spokesman for the , which runs the , said in an email to Computerworld today that officials are still working on repair plans -- and a budget. So far, he added, it appears that it will cost upwards of US$21 million to get the collider operational again.

Late in September, disclosed that a had knocked the collider offline till next spring.

The problems came shortly after the run on Sept. 10, when a particle beam shot fully around the 17-mile, underground vacuum-sealed tube. After that, another beam was shot around the tube going in the opposite direction.

That test was top be a precursor to the smashing of two beams in the tube, an action researchers expect will recreate conditions in the universe just moments after its conception, giving scientists the chance to answer one of humanity's oldest questions: ?

Before the wiring problem, the collision test was expected to take place this fall. Now, it has been pushed back until at least next spring. In the last few days, online reports have surfaced saying that the collider may be down till at least June. Gillies would not confirm or deny those reports, nor would he say exactly what fixes will be needed.

Shortly after the first test, CERN said that an electrical connection between two magnets had melted, causing a "large helium leak" in the tunnel. "At no time was there any risk to people," the agency said at the time.

As part of the investigation, technicians brought the affected area of the collider's tunnel to room temperature and the involved magnets had to be opened for inspection. After the work is complete, the entire area will need to be recooled.

The faulty wiring issue arose two weeks after a was replaced in the machine.

Early in October, shortly after the problems were disclosed, a U.S. federal judge seeking to halt experiments in the Large Hadron Collider.

The civil suit called for more safety reviews to be done before any experiments could be conducted at the collider. Chief Judge Helen Gillmor wrote in her decision that the U.S. federal courts do not have jurisdiction over the European-based collider, even though the project received $531 million in U.S. funding. Gillmor concluded that the U.S. contribution was not a "major federal action" because it accounted for less than 10% of the cost to construct the collider.

Fears about the collider experiments reached such a furor that , an physics professor and Nobel laureate, received this fall because of his earlier involvement with the Large Hadron Collider.