China’s decision to pause its major particle accelerator project presents an “opportunity” to ensure Europe’s rival plan goes ahead, the head of the CERN physics laboratory said.
Ten years ago, China announced its intention to build the Circular Electron Positron Collider (CEPC), which at 100km long would be the world’s largest particle accelerator.
However, Beijing recently put the project on ice, CERN director-general Fabiola Gianotti told a small group of journalists at a recent briefing.
Photo: AFP
China’s CEPC would be way bigger than CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC) — currently the world’s largest, whizzing particles into each other at phenomenal speeds.
The 27km proton-smashing ring running about 100m below the border between France and Switzerland, has, among other things, been used to prove the existence of the Higgs boson.
Dubbed the God particle, its discovery in 2012 broadened science’s understanding of how particles acquire mass.
CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research whose main offices also straddle the border near Geneva, seeks to unravel what the universe is made of and how it works.
The LHC is expected to have fully run its course by around 2040, and CERN is considering building a far larger collider to allow scientists to keep pushing the boundaries of knowledge.
The planned Future Circular Collider (FCC) would be a ring with a circumference of 91km and an average depth of 200m.
Scientists believe that ordinary matter — such as stars, gases, dust, planets and everything on them — accounts for just 5 percent of the universe.
The FCC will try to reveal what makes up the other 95 percent of the energy and matter in the universe — so-called dark matter and dark energy, which scientists have yet to observe directly.
The gigantic project, costing about US$17 billion, has not yet received the green light from CERN’s 25 member states.
However, the CERN Council, its decisionmaking body, “issued a very positive opinion on November 7” regarding the feasibility study, which includes geological, territorial, technological, scientific and financial aspects, Gianotti said.
“If all goes well, the project could be approved in 2028,” she added.
The FCC, which could become operational by the end of the 2040s, is considered excessive by its opponents, especially if China was doing similar research in a similar-sized ring at a cheaper price.
However, China’s halt gives CERN a clear run.
“The Chinese Academy of Sciences, which filters projects, has decided to give the green light to a smaller, lower-energy collider, rather than the larger CEPC, which is in direct competition with CERN,” Gianotti said.
In China, Wang Yifang (王貽芳), head of the Institute of High Energy Physics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, confirmed that the CEPC was not included in the next five-year plan.
“We plan to submit CEPC for consideration again in 2030, unless FCC is officially approved before then, in which case we will seek to join FCC, and give up CEPC,” he said.
For Gianotti, “this is an opportunity: firstly, because if the Chinese project had been approved, it would likely have started much sooner than the FCC,” she said.
“It’s also interesting to know that, if the FCC is approved, the Chinese would abandon their project to come and work with us,” added the Italian, whose five-year term finishes at the end of this month.
Gianotti is to be succeeded by British physicist Mark Thomson.
However, China’s decision has provided an argument for the Co-cernes collective, which brings together local opponents of the FCC who fear the effects of the massive digging project.
If a super collider was of “real scientific interest, China would undoubtedly not have abandoned it,” it said.
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