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CERN lowers CMS detector 100m underground
10 March 2008

CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) recently celebrated the lowering of the 15th and last piece of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) detector, an endcap of 1,430t, 100m underground.

It moves CERN closer to the start-up of CERN 2's Large Hadron Collider 3 (LHC) this summer. This is a pivotal moment for the CMS collaboration, as the experiment is the first of its kind to be constructed above ground and then lowered, element by element, 100m below. It marks the culmination of eight years of work in the surface hall, and moves CMS into final commissioning before registering proton-proton collisions at the LHC.

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The journey started 14 months ago, when the first of 15 elements of the CMS detector was carefully lowered, with just a few centimetres of leeway, by a huge gantry crane, custom-built by the VSL group. The final element is an asymmetrical cap that fits into the barrel element of the experiment. It includes fragile detectors that will help identify and measure the energy of particles created in LHC collisions.

Austin Ball, CMS technical coordinator, said: "CMS is unique in the way that the detector was constructed in very large elements in a surface assembly building and then lowered underground. This is likely to become a model for future experiments, as the technique can now be considered proven," he added.

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CERN says there are many advantages to planning an experiment in this way, such as the ability to save time by working simultaneously on the detector while the experimental cavern was being excavated. There were also fewer risks when working on the surface, and elements of detector could be tested together before lowering them.

Experiments at the LHC will allow physicists to take a big leap on a journey that started with Newton's description of gravity. Gravity is ubiquitous since it acts on mass, but so far science is unable to explain why particles have the masses they have. Experiments such as CMS may provide the answer. LHC experiments will also probe the mysterious missing mass and dark energy of the universe, they will investigate the reason for nature's preference for matter over antimatter, probe matter as it existed close to the beginning of time and look for extra dimensions of spacetime.

CMS spokesman Tejinder Virdee said: "This is a very exciting time for physics. The LHC is poised to take us to a new level of understanding of our universe."



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CMS spokesman Tejinder Virdee said: 'This is a very ...