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Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Large Hadron Collider gets new name: 'Halo'


Large Hadron Collider: Public chooses 'Halo' as its new name


By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
Last Updated: 6:01pm BST 17/09/2008


Forget about the yawn-inducing Large Hadron Collider.
  • Full coverage of the Large Hadron Collider atom smasher

  • Large Hadron Collider: Scientists launch competition for a funkier name

  • Large Hadron Collider: First subatomic particle collision to happen next week

  • The name "Halo" sounds much catchier and should adorn the £4.4 billion experiment, according to a poll organised by the Royal Society of Chemistry in London
     
    The public have decided the Large Hadron Collider should have the catchier name Halo

    The Large Hadron Collider does what it says on the tin, since hadron refers to the subatomic particles that the giant machine smashes together at a shade below the speed of light.

    But this "fails to reflect the drama of its mission, or the inspiration it should be conveying to the wider public," says Dr Richard Pike, chief executive of the Society.

    The Society launched a competition to suggest an inspiring name for the 17 mile circumference machine, which is going to smash its first particles next week at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research in Geneva, known by its French acronym Cern.

    After sifting more than 2,500 responses, ranging from The Big Banger to Infinite Devil Machine and The Matter Splatterer, it has now selected a winner to rechristen the vast enterprise.
    Fed up with "the contrived acronyms that plague the world of science," the RSC says it "picked a suggestion which is simple, memorable, and brings to mind the deserved grandeur of perhaps the most important experiment ever built."
    "Halo conjures visions of radiant beauty, power and wisdom. The circle of light reflects the collider's form; it is a crowning achievement of science and engineering. It also gives more than a nod to the experiment's importance to religious debate.
    The name Halo was by far the most popular entry. The winner was chosen at random from the hundreds of people who suggested it; Aaron Borges of Rhode Island, USA, who wins £500 ($892) .

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