AP/ November 9, 2010, 4:40 PM

Hadron Collider Produces "Mini Big Bang"

Scientists at the world's largest atom smasher said Monday they have succeeded in recreating conditions shortly after the Big Bang by switching the particles they use for collisions from protons to much heavier lead ions.

The Large Hadron Collider recorded its first lead ion collisions on Sunday and has since stabilized the twin beams sufficiently to start running physics experiments, said a spokeswoman for the The European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN).

The collisions produce an effect that is as close as researchers have ever come to observing the state of matter moments after the formation of the universe, which is believed to have begun with a colossal explosion known as the Big Bang.

The event inside the collider "is a very, very, very small bang," CERN spokeswoman Barbara Warmbein told The Associated Press.

Still, researchers are hoping the collisions will be powerful enough to produce a thick soup of matter called "quark-gluon plasma" that will help them gain a deeper insight into how the universe began.

The $10-billion Large Hadron Collider was fired up in September 2008 and, despite some technical setbacks, has been hailed by scientists as a key tool for understanding or reshaping our knowledge about the universe.

Most of the time it will be used to smash together protons in the hope that one of the four giant detectors - situated around the collider's 17-mile tunnel under the Swiss-French border - will find evidence of dark matter, antimatter and maybe even hidden dimensions of space and time.

But for one month each year, before shutting down for winter maintenance in December, the Large Hadron Collider will smash together lead ions, said Warmbein.

Lead ions - which are lead atoms with the electrons removed - are much heavier than protons, meaning the energy used to circulate them is far higher.

"They are more likely to create the state of matter that ALICE is looking for," said Warmbein, referring to the detector that will be used to search for the plasma.

Gallery: Present at the Creation with the CERN Atom Smasher

The resulting quark-gluon plasma, which is initially many times hotter than the sun, quickly cools, causing subatomic particles to stick together and form protons and neutrons. Scientists believe that by studying this process they will better understand how matter came into being.

Warmbein said that it will likely be months, if not years, before scientists make significant new discoveries.


Watch Steve Kroft of "60 Minutes" Tour the Collider:


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By Associated Press Writer Frank Jordans
© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
10 Comments Add a Comment
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stevehartwell says:
The teeny part about what they're doing with the Hadron that nags at me is - they say there's nothing to worry about, it's just a mini big bang - except - they also say our entire Universe was begat from a particle smaller than a lead ion. 1/ Is that what we are - the result of a bunch of dumb scientists screwing around with mini big bangs ? 2/ If the Hadron creates a new Universe, does it expand and wipe ours out, starting with Earth ?
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antoniof123 says:
Okay this is nice I just have a question at this point I still don't get it.

No matter what we try someone will always complain I think that if all you do is complain and hate everything that is different from you then what does that make you?

That is my question what does it make you?
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lancesackless says:
"But what became before the Big Bang?" - Opus penguin

"Yessir, an even BIGGER BANG!" - Oliver Wendell Jones
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AOCGUY says:
So where did the matter that makes up the universe come from prior to the creation of the universe? Did it just magically appear? Did it come from another universe and if so what created that universe? And if there was a beginning to time, then what was there the moment prior to the beginning?
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nic1234567-2009 replies:
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Truth is we really do not know, though there are many theories. One theory resides within the multi-dimensional extension of string theory known as M-theory, also known as Membrane Theory. In M-theory our universe and others are created by collisions between p-branes in a multi-dimensional space forming multiple big bangs. M-Theory is not yet complete, but the underlying structure of the mathematics has been established and is in agreement with not only all the string theories, but with all of our scientific observations of the universe. Furthermore, it has passed many tests of internal mathematical consistency that many other attempts to combine quantum mechanics and gravity had failed.
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jjoe57 says:
Sorry, my mistake. It was lead ions that collided, not protons. Makes a big difference.
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jjoe57 says:
Yep, two protons collided at super speeds and produced this quark-gluon plasma. Hooray. Now we know that someone lit a match on quark-gluon plasma and it caused a big bang that created huge constellations, galaxies, star systems, etc., that now spans billions of light years in diameter. From nothing came quark-gluon plasma (except, of course, the original particles are protons, excuse me.) And, oh yes, the big bang had to occur somewhere near the planet Earth because that is our vantage point.
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imthaid says:
They REALLY should have built this thing right under Washington DC.
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formrusmcsgt says:
Scientific discovery is wasted on those who prefer to believe in fairy tales.
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johndevinejr replies:
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Especially when those discoveries conflict with religious belief.