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Microcosm or CERN Museum is an interactive exhibition presenting the work of the CERN particle physics laboratory and its flagship accelerator the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The current exhibition officially opened in January 2016.[1] Contents were developed by CERN in collaboration with Spanish design team Indissoluble.[2]

History

The project was approved by the CERN Directorate in February 1988. The initial construction, to a large extent completed in 1989, was financed through contributions from the Canton of Geneva, the Swiss Confederation, neighbouring France, banks and industrial firms.[3][4]

CMS life-size model

Main Exhibits

The exhibition displays many real objects, taking visitors on a journey through CERN's key installations, from the Hydrogen bottle, source of the protons that are injected into the LHC, through the first step in the accelerator chain, the Linac, on to a model of a section of the Large Hadron Collider including elements from the superconducting magnets. Visitors can interact with the displays to try their hand at the controls of a particle accelerator – simulating the acceleration of protons in the LHC and bringing them into collision inside the experiments.

The exhibition continues with a 1 :1 scale model of a complete slice through the CMS experiment at the LHC. The computing section displays some of the Oracle data tapes used to store the 30-40 petabytes of data produced yearly by the experiments, made available for analysis using the LHC Computing GRID. The annex to the exhibition contains other historical artifacts such as the central tracker from the UA1 detector, which ran at the Super Proton Synchrotron at CERN from 1981 to 1984, and helped discover the W and Z bosons.

Special Projects

A project began in 2013 to preserve the original hardware and software associated with the birth of the World Wide Web. Some of the original code resides on Tim Berners-Lee's NeXT Computer in the CERN museum and has not been recovered due to the computer's status as a historical artifact.[5] This effort coincided with the 20th anniversary of the research center giving the web to the world.[6]
Microcosm garden

The Microcosm garden is named Léon Van Hove Square in honour of CERN's Research Director-General from 1976–1980.[7] The garden features several large components of old CERN experiments.

The garden view

General view of the Detectors room

Entrance to the exhibition

Introduction to the particles room

The Big European Bubble Chamber

An RF cavity from the Large Electron–Positron Collider

Initial stages of an old particle accelerator

Particles room also features an interactive cloud chamber - device capable of displaying normally undetectable traces of radiation

Measuring energy detector

Detectors room

DATA room

LHC control room

The central section of the UA1 experiment on display at the Microcosm museum

Location

Microcosm is located at CERN in the Canton of Geneva, Switzerland, near the town of Meyrin. Entrance is free, without reservation, open 6 days a week.[8]
References

"La nouvelle expo du Cern vous rend presque chercheur". www.ledauphine.com. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
indissoluble.com (2012-12-21). "Indissoluble. We create spaces that communicate. Temporary architecture, interior design, interaction and assembling for exhibitions, stands and museums". indissoluble.com. Retrieved 2016-01-18.
Gifts for the Implementation of the Microcosm Project (Report). CERN. 21 November 1988. CERN/1721 ; CERN/FC/3197.
Hentsch, Guy; Kienzle, Werner; Jacob, Maurice (4 December 1989). "Microcosm" (PDF). Bulletin. Geneva: CERN.
"The birth of the Web | CERN". home.cern. Retrieved 2019-07-21.
Ghosh, Pallab. "Cern re-creating first web page to revere early ideals". BBC. Retrieved 30 April 2013.
"Microcosm" (PDF). Bulletin. Geneva: CERN. 17 December 1990.

"Practical Information | MICROCOSM". microcosm.web.cern.ch. Retrieved 2016-01-18.

External links

CERN Microcosm Webpage
INDISSOLUBLE

Physics Encyclopedia

World

Index

Hellenica World - Scientific Library

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/"
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