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Lowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th November

Gigantic disc of CMS detector travels 100 m under the Earth It's an amazing engineering challenge - the lowering of the first tremendous endcap disc, known as YE+3, of the CMS particle detector slowly and carefully 100 m underground into the experimental cavern. The disc is one of 15 large piec...

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Autor principal: Max Brice, CERN
Publicado: 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1002192
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author Max Brice, CERN
author_facet Max Brice, CERN
author_sort Max Brice, CERN
collection CERN
description Gigantic disc of CMS detector travels 100 m under the Earth It's an amazing engineering challenge - the lowering of the first tremendous endcap disc, known as YE+3, of the CMS particle detector slowly and carefully 100 m underground into the experimental cavern. The disc is one of 15 large pieces to make the grand descent. It's a uniquely shaped slice, 16 m high, about 50 cm thick and weighing 400 tonnes. The solid steel structure of the disc forms part of the magnet return yoke and is equipped on both sides with muon chambers. A special gantry crane will lower the element, with just 20 cm of leeway between the edges of the detector and the walls of the shaft. CMS is one of the four main experiments that will take data at the world's highest energy particle accelerator, CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The LHC is a 27 km circular ring 100 m underground. The CMS detector weighs a total of 12 500 tonnes and is constructed on the surface. Once all of the pieces are fully equipped, lowered underground and re-tested, they will be pushed together in preparation for the LHC start-up in November 2007.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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spelling cern-10021922019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1002192Max Brice, CERNLowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th NovemberMuon DetectorGigantic disc of CMS detector travels 100 m under the Earth It's an amazing engineering challenge - the lowering of the first tremendous endcap disc, known as YE+3, of the CMS particle detector slowly and carefully 100 m underground into the experimental cavern. The disc is one of 15 large pieces to make the grand descent. It's a uniquely shaped slice, 16 m high, about 50 cm thick and weighing 400 tonnes. The solid steel structure of the disc forms part of the magnet return yoke and is equipped on both sides with muon chambers. A special gantry crane will lower the element, with just 20 cm of leeway between the edges of the detector and the walls of the shaft. CMS is one of the four main experiments that will take data at the world's highest energy particle accelerator, CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The LHC is a 27 km circular ring 100 m underground. The CMS detector weighs a total of 12 500 tonnes and is constructed on the surface. Once all of the pieces are fully equipped, lowered underground and re-tested, they will be pushed together in preparation for the LHC start-up in November 2007.CMS-PHO-OREACH-2006-027oai:cds.cern.ch:10021922006-11-30
spellingShingle Muon Detector
Max Brice, CERN
Lowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th November
title Lowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th November
title_full Lowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th November
title_fullStr Lowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th November
title_full_unstemmed Lowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th November
title_short Lowering of the YE+3 endcap disc on 30th November
title_sort lowering of the ye+3 endcap disc on 30th november
topic Muon Detector
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1002192
work_keys_str_mv AT maxbricecern loweringoftheye3endcapdiscon30thnovember