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Each year, the Large Hadron Collider undergoes a winter shutdown—when electricity costs are highest—and bringing it back online requires weeks of tests, including some involving high-energy particles from outer space.

Findings

Additional insights we found via The Conversation

  1. Cosmic rays traveling through the ATLAS detector's concentric sensors help verify they work as expected.

  2. In mid-March, "beam splashes"—clusters of particles created when a proton strikes a protective block when deviating from the beam path—are purposely created to test detector reaction, synchronization, and data collection and storage.

  3. Muons, or more massive versions of electrons, which can be created via protons grazing the protective blocks, also help test dedicated sensors.

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