The world’s most
powerful particle accelerator has gone quiet. Particles took their last spin
around the Large Hadron Collider on December 3 before scientists shut the machine down for two years of upgrades.
Located at the
particle physics laboratory CERN in Geneva, the accelerator has smashed
together approximately 16 million billion protons since 2015, when it reached
its current energy of 13 trillion electron volts. Planned improvements before
the machine restarts in 2021 will bring the energy up to 14 trillion electron
volts — the energy it was originally designed to reach.
During a round of
lower-energy collisions between 2009 and 2013, researchers found the elusive Higgs
boson, filling in the last missing piece of the standard model of particle
physics.

The planned
adjustments to the machine will also lay the groundwork for another incarnation
of the collider further in the future, known as the High-Luminosity
LHC. That upgrade, expected to be ready by
2026, will increase the rate of proton smashups by at least a factor of five.
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