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Engineering challenges of future particle accelerators

Abstract:
Particle physics is on the threshold of major discoveries which will shed light on the origin of mass, dark matter, and possible extra spatial dimensions in nature. Future particle accelerators will recreate matter conditions not seen since the first few billionths of a second after the Big Bang. The engineering challenges are immense. 30km-long straight tunnels must be drilled to house the accelerator, and components must be aligned and stabilised to microns over distances of kilometers. High-power superconducting niobium radio-frequency cavities will drive electron and positron beams to velocities approaching the speed of light. The beams must be made a few nanometers in size, and collided head-on after traversing tens of kilometers. Feedback and control systems must keep the beams in collision on nanosecond timescales. The paper will review these extreme engineering challenges and report on the advanced RandD being done in the UK and elsewhere to get us to our physics goals. © 2008 IOP Publishing Ltd.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1088/1742-6596/105/1/012008

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Journal:
ENGINEERING AND PHYSICS - SYNERGY FOR SUCCESS More from this journal
Volume:
105
Issue:
1
Pages:
012008-012008
Publication date:
2008-01-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1742-6596
ISSN:
1742-6588


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:215838
UUID:
uuid:b56f21ae-ee8c-4559-ad8c-612100b3e4e2
Local pid:
pubs:215838
Source identifiers:
215838
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

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