Touring the Large Hadron Collider [duplicate]
Any ideas as to how one might go about getting a tour of the Large Hadron Collider?
Best Answer
The Hadron Collider is part of the CERN (European nuclear research center).
From a quick googling…
There seems to be some "open days" where there are organized visits.
Have a look at: http://opendays2013.web.cern.ch/
Other than that, I think you will need at least some contacts and references from professors from universities associated with the CERN.
Maybe if you are a journalist (a real one) you might have access to the Collider, but you will still need references.
Or simply contact them.
Good luck.
Pictures about "Touring the Large Hadron Collider [duplicate]"
Can you take a tour of the Large Hadron Collider?
Six LHC underground sites will be opened for visits during the Open Days: ATLAS \u2013 point 1, ALICE \u2013 point 2, LHC Radio Frequency \u2013 point 4, CMS \u2013 point 5, LHC accelerator \u2013 point 6 and LHCb \u2013 point 8. These sites are only accessible to those who are at least 12 years old.What happens if you put your hand in the Large Hadron Collider?
"So there's an intense beam of particles coming down [the tunnel] that accompanies this extremely intense part. So your whole body would be irradiated. You'd die pretty quickly." The fatal event would be more of a fizzle than a bang.What happens if you stand in a hadron collider?
The danger is the energy. If you stood in front of the beam you would end up with a very sharp, very thin line of ultra-irradiated dead tissue going through your body. It might possibly drill a hole through you.Has the LHC found anything yet?
Physicists have detected "ghost particles" called neutrinos inside an atom smasher for the first time. The tiny particles, known as neutrinos, were spotted during the test run of a new detector at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) \u2014 the world's largest particle accelerator, located at CERN near Geneva, Switzerland.il Large Hadron Collider (Italiano)
More answers regarding touring the Large Hadron Collider [duplicate]
Answer 2
I visited the LHC on this years' open days. It was an experience I was glad I took part in. Some people even flew in for the day just to visit CERN. Such open days are unfortunately rather rare. Underground visits are only permitted when the LHC is on hiatus. When the collider is in operation you can't go down there, because of radiation risks, but more importantly because of the liquid helium used to cool the thing down, which is very dangerous.
Currently the LHC is down, and is being maintained (Which meant that we could even see some partly disassembled parts). Because of this more visits are planned. I know you can get a visit if you know the right persons. That's how I got a tour of the LHC when it was still under construction two decades ago. But I also know that it is possible that over the next year some more underground tours will be organised. Keep coming back to the CERN website for more information.
Answer 3
If you take a broad definition of tour, to include virtual tour, you could consider Google Streetview, as the Large Hadron Collider was mapped
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