CERN is about to set up CLIC linear linear accelerator
Scientists from the European Atomic Energy Research Organization (CERN) plan to build and install a linear compression accelerator called CLIC in an 80km tunnel in the territory of Switzerland and France.
Researchers at the European Atomic Energy Research Organization (CERN) plan to build and install a linear compression accelerator called the CLIC in an 80km tunnel in the Swiss and French territories (state Geneva and Ain, France) to unravel the ultimate mysteries of the universe.
The tunnel will put linear accelerator CLIC compression.
CERN physicists do not want to rest on the glory they have achieved.
Just two months after the discovery of the Higgs, CERN scientists have embarked on a series of major new projects. One of the projects is the construction of a linear linear acceleration machine - the CLIC is located in an 80km tunnel located in Switzerland and France.
CLIC is expected to harness the discoveries of the large accelerator (LHC).
The LHC was previously housed in a 27km long tunnel in Switzerland and France, which in the future will be replaced by a higher performance CLIC. According to CERN, after 2030, the LHC will have nothing left to explore.
CLIC allows scientists to answer one of the open-space-related questions that understand the operation of gravity at the quantum level.
CERN physicist Hans Peter Beck says that thanks to the CLIC, one can find a fundamental theory that explains the universe in its entirety.
This week, scientists from many countries around the world will meet in Cracovie, Poland, to decide how to continue their research on the issue.
In the current situation, the construction of an 80km tunnel is considered to be the most promising.
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