The ATLAS Experiment

Push the frontiers of knowledge

ATLAS is a general-purpose particle physics experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. It is designed to exploit the full discovery potential of the LHC, pushing the frontiers of scientific knowledge. ATLAS' exploration uses precision measurement to push the frontiers of knowledge by seeking answers to fundamental questions such as: What are the basic building blocks of matter? What are the fundamental forces of nature? What is dark matter made of?

Global Collaboration

ATLAS is a collaboration of physicists, engineers, technicians, students and support staff from around the world. It is one of the largest collaborative efforts ever attempted in science, with over 5500 members and almost 3000 scientific authors. The success of ATLAS relies on the close collaboration of research teams located at CERN, and at member universities and laboratories worldwide.

Experimental behemoth

ATLAS is the largest detector ever constructed for a particle collider: 46 metres long and 25 metres in diameter. Its construction pushed the limits of existing technology. ATLAS is designed to record the high-energy particle collisions of the LHC, which take place at a rate of over a billion interactions per second in the centre of the detector. More than 100 million sensitive electronics channels are used to record the particles produced by the collisions, which are then analysed by ATLAS scientists.

Understanding the Universe

ATLAS physicists are studying the fundamental constituents of matter to better understand the rules behind their interactions. Their research has lead to ground-breaking discoveries, such as that of the Higgs boson. The years ahead will be exciting as ATLAS takes experimental physics into unexplored territories – searching for new processes and particles that could change our understanding of energy and matter.

Map

ATLAS Across Time

The approval of the ATLAS Experiment was an important milestone in the history of particle physics – but it was just the first step in a long journey. Making ATLAS a reality required years of innovative developments in technology and physics. Learn the history of its development in the timeline below.

Monday
1 Jul/19
11:49 - 11:49
Event

News from LHCP2019

ATLAS presents new searches for electroweak supersymmetry using the full Run 2 dataset.

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View of the ATLAS detector during July 2007
(Image: CERN)

Detector & Technology

The largest volume detector ever constructed for a particle collider, ATLAS has the dimensions of a cylinder, 46m long, 25m in diameter, and sits in a cavern100m below ground. The ATLAS detector weighs 7,000 tonnes, similar to the weight of the Eiffel Tower.

The detector itself is a many-layered instrument designed to detect some of the tiniest yet most energetic particles ever created on earth. It consists of six different detecting subsystems wrapped concentrically in layers around the collision point to record the trajectory, momentum, and energy of particles, allowing them to be individually identified and measured. A huge magnet system bends the paths of the charged particles so that their momenta can be measured as precisely as possible.

Beams of particles travelling at energies up to seven trillion electron-volts, or speeds up to 99.999999% that of light, from the LHC collide at the centre of the ATLAS detector producing collision debris in the form of new particles which fly out in all directions. Over a billion particle interactions take place in the ATLAS detector every second, a data rate equivalent to 20 simultaneous telephone conversations held by every person on the earth. Only one in a million collisions are flagged as potentially interesting and recorded for further study. The detector tracks and identifies particles to investigate a wide range of physics, from the study of the Higgs boson and top quark to the search for extra dimensions and particles that could make up dark matter.

Take a virtual walk around the ATLAS Detector in the cavern at Point 1 of the LHC.

The first ATLAS Inner Detector End-cap after complete insertion within the Liquid Argon Cryostat.
(Image: CERN)

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The inner detector is the first part of ATLAS to see the decay products of the collisions, so it is very compact and highly sensitive. It consists of three different systems of sensors all immersed in a magnetic field parallel to the beam axis. The Inner Detector measures the direction, momentum, and charge of electrically-charged particles produced in each proton-proton collision.

The main components of the Inner Detector are: Pixel DetectorSemiconductor Tracker (SCT), and Transition Radiation Tracker (TRT).

Inner Detector

The inner detector is the first part of ATLAS to see the decay products of the collisions, so it is very compact and highly sensitive. It consists of three different systems of sensors all immersed in a magnetic field parallel to the beam axis. The Inner Detector measures the direction, momentum, and charge of electrically-charged particles produced in each proton-proton collision.

The main components of the Inner Detector are: Pixel DetectorSemiconductor Tracker (SCT), and Transition Radiation Tracker (TRT).

velo,Life at CERN
Henrik Nissen, president of the CERN Bike Club, congratulating Tim Smith, the winner of the 2013 exercise, with 7182 registered kilometers. (Image: CERN)

Sounds!

Inspired by ATLAS’ optical metrology technology, a team of researchers developed a new system to recover sound from old records.

In ATLAS’ SemiConductor Tracker  there are 16,000 carefully aligned silicon detectors. Their accurate position was obtained thanks to optical metrology tools, which can give measurements with a precision of a few micrometres.

Sounds!

Inspired by ATLAS’ optical metrology technology, a team of researchers developed a new system to recover sound from old records.

In ATLAS’ SemiConductor Tracker  there are 16,000 carefully aligned silicon detectors. Their accurate position was obtained thanks to optical metrology tools, which can give measurements with a precision of a few micrometres.

Sounds!

Inspired by ATLAS’ optical metrology technology, a team of researchers developed a new system to recover sound from old records.

In ATLAS’ SemiConductor Tracker  there are 16,000 carefully aligned silicon detectors. Their accurate position was obtained thanks to optical metrology tools, which can give measurements with a precision of a few micrometres.

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velo,Life at CERN
Henrik Nissen, president of the CERN Bike Club, congratulating Tim Smith, the winner of the 2013 exercise, with 7182 registered kilometers. (Image: CERN)

This is some text about how handsome Tim Smith looks because of all of his bicycle riding.

2019-03-19T14:02:17
2019-03-19T14:20:41
2019-03-19T14:21:20
ATLAS Event Display: Higgs boson coupling to top quark in diphoton channel
Visualisation of an event from the tt̄H(γγ) analysis. The event contains two photon candidates (green towers), while the b-jets are shown as yellow (blue) cones. (Image: CERN)

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The Standard Model also describes the fundamental forces of Nature and how they act between fundamental particles. Possible discoveries at the LHC could validate models, such as those incorporating Supersymmetry, where the forces unify at very high energies.

2019-03-19T15:00:55
2019-03-19T15:01:29
2019-03-19T15:02:03

17th March 2019

ATLAS observes light scattering off light

Light-by-light scattering is a very rare phenomenon in which two photons – or particles of light – interact.

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27th February 2019

ATLAS releases first result with full Run 2 dataset

The new ATLAS analysis searches for new heavy particles.

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View of the ATLAS detector during July 2007
(Image: CERN)

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