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CERN is the European Organization for Particle Physics Research, the world's largest particle physics laboratory, situated on the border between France and Switzerland, just west of Geneva. The
convention establishing it was signed on September 29, 1954. From the original 12 signatories of the CERN convention, membership has grown to the present 20 Member
States.
CERN currently employs just under 3000 people full-time. Some 6500 scientists and engineers (representing 500 universities and
80 nationalities), about half of the world's particle physics community, work on experiments conducted at CERN.
The acronym
The acronym originally stood, in French, for Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire (European Council for
Nuclear Research), which was a provisional council for setting up the laboratory, established by 11 European governments in
1952. The acronym was retained for the new laboratory after the provisional council was
dissolved, and informally changed to Centre Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire (European Centre for Nuclear
Research).
The accelerator complex
The CERN accelerator complex has six main
accelerators:
- Two linear accelerators generating low energy particles for
injection into the Proton Synchroton. One is for protons and the other for heavy ions. These are known as Linac2 and Linac3
respectively.
- The PS Booster, which increases
the energy of particles generated by the linear accelerators before they are transferred to the other accelerators.
- The 28 GeV Proton Synchroton (PS) built 1959.
- The Super
Proton Synchrotron (SPS), a 2 km diameter circular accelerator built in a tunnel, which started operation in 1971. It originally had an energy of 300 GeV (but has been upgraded several times). As well as
having its own beamlines for fixed-target experiments, it has been operated as a proton-antiproton collider, and for accelerating high energy electrons and positrons which were injected into the Large Electron Positron (LEP) collider.
- Isotope
Separator On-line (ISOLDE), which was used to study unstable nuclei and first commissioned in 1967. Particles are initially accelerated in the PS Booster before entering ISOLDE.
The accelerator of the future: the LHC
It also has very impressive computer and wide-area networking facilities which are primarily used for experimental data
analysis.
Most of the activities at CERN are currently directed towards building a new collider, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the experiments for it, due to
start operation in 2007. This will use the 27 km circumference circular tunnel previously
occupied by LEP which was closed down in November 2000, and the PS/SPS complex to
pre-accelerate protons which will be injected into it.
Decommissioned accelerators
- The original linear accelerator (Linac1).
- The 600 MeV Synchro-Cyclotron (SC) which started operation in 1957 and was
shut down in 1991.
- The Intersecting Storage Rings (ISR),
an early collider built in 1966
- LEP, which started operating in 1989.
- Low
Energy Antiproton Ring (LEAR), commissioned in 1982. This assembled the first pieces of
true antimatter, in 1995, consisting of nine atoms of antihydrogen. It was closed in
1996, and superseded by the Antiproton
Decelerator.
As the SPS and the LEP tunnels cross the Franco-Swiss border, there are several experimental areas on the French side in
addition to the main site which is in Switzerland for legal purposes (although since 1965
it actually occupies land on both sides of the border).
There is also the Antiproton Decelerator (AD), which reduces the speed of antiprotons (which are created travelling at
nearly the speed of light) for research into antimatter.
The Computer Science and the CERN
The World Wide Web began as a CERN project. On April 30th 1993 CERN announced that the World Wide
Web would be free to anyone, with no fees due.
Member States
The original CERN signatories were:
- Belgium,
- Denmark,
- Federal Republic of Germany,
- France,
- Greece,
- Italy,
- Norway,
- Sweden,
- Switzerland,
- The Netherlands,
- The United Kingdom,
- Yugoslavia.
Since then:
Bringing the current number of member countries to 20.
Footnote
- [1] According to Lew Kowarski, a former director of CERN, when the name was changed, and the acronym could have become the
awkward OERN, Heisenberg said "But the acronym can still be CERN even if the name is ...
External links
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