Cern: might a100-km circular collider follow the LHC?
Wednesday, March 11th, 2015 @ 18:30
Globe@CERN, Geneva
18H30-19H30: talk: CERN looks to the long-term future - might a 100km circular collier follow the LHC around mid-century?
19H30- 20H00 Questions and Answers
Language: French with English translation
Tickets: http://iyl.eventbrite.com
Place: Globe of Science and Innovation, CERN ( just in front of tram stop CERN)
Speaker: Frederick Bordry, CERN Director for Accelerators and Technology
Particle physics is a long-term field of research:the LHC was originally conceived in the 1980s, but did not start running until 25 years later.An accelerator unlike any other, it is now just at the start of a programme that is set to run for another 20 years.
While the LHC programme is already well defined for the next two decades, it is now time to look even further ahead, and so CERN is initiating an exploratory study for a future long-term project centred on a next-generation circular collider with a circumference of 80 to 100 kilometres.A worthy successor to the LHC, whose collision energies will reach 13 TeV in 2015, such an accelerator would allow particle physicists to push the boundaries of knowledge even further.The Future Circular Collider (FCC) programme will focus on studies for a hadron collider, like the LHC, capable of reaching unprecedented energies in the region of 100 TeV. It will also study electron-positron and electron-proton options.
Opening with an introduction to the LHC and its physics programme, this lecture will then focus on the feasibility of designing, building and operating a machine approaching 100 km in length and the biggest challenges that this would pose, as well as the different options for such a machine (proton-proton, electron-positron or electron-proton collisions).
As Director for Accelerators and Technology, Frédérick Bordry is in charge of the operation of the whole CERN accelerator complex, with a special focus on the LHC (Large Hadron Collider), and the development of post-LHC projects and technologies.
19H30- 20H00 Questions and Answers
Language: French with English translation
Tickets: http://iyl.eventbrite.com
Place: Globe of Science and Innovation, CERN ( just in front of tram stop CERN)
Speaker: Frederick Bordry, CERN Director for Accelerators and Technology
Particle physics is a long-term field of research:the LHC was originally conceived in the 1980s, but did not start running until 25 years later.An accelerator unlike any other, it is now just at the start of a programme that is set to run for another 20 years.
While the LHC programme is already well defined for the next two decades, it is now time to look even further ahead, and so CERN is initiating an exploratory study for a future long-term project centred on a next-generation circular collider with a circumference of 80 to 100 kilometres.A worthy successor to the LHC, whose collision energies will reach 13 TeV in 2015, such an accelerator would allow particle physicists to push the boundaries of knowledge even further.The Future Circular Collider (FCC) programme will focus on studies for a hadron collider, like the LHC, capable of reaching unprecedented energies in the region of 100 TeV. It will also study electron-positron and electron-proton options.
Opening with an introduction to the LHC and its physics programme, this lecture will then focus on the feasibility of designing, building and operating a machine approaching 100 km in length and the biggest challenges that this would pose, as well as the different options for such a machine (proton-proton, electron-positron or electron-proton collisions).
As Director for Accelerators and Technology, Frédérick Bordry is in charge of the operation of the whole CERN accelerator complex, with a special focus on the LHC (Large Hadron Collider), and the development of post-LHC projects and technologies.
Talk
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