The MoEDAL Experiment at the LHC

The MoEDAL Experiment at the LHC MoEDAL is the 7th and newest experiment at CERN's LHC. Its groundbreaking program provides a new light on the high energy discover frontier.

The LHC provides an extraordinary new light at the high-energy frontier allowing direct exploration of the fundamental physical laws governing the evolution of the Universe just a fraction of a second after the Big Bang when particle energies were in the TeV range - the Terascale. The MoEDAL experiment is a groundbreaking experiment designed to search for Highly Ionizing Particle (HIP) avatars of

new physics at the Terascale. The "high-risk" nature of MoEDAL’s extensive physics program is compelling not only because of the prospect of a revolutionary breakthrough with impact far beyond the realm of particle physics, but also by the certitude of unique and extensive search constraints it can place on new physics. The innovative MoEDAL detector employs unconventional methodologies tuned to the prospect of discovery physics. The largely passive MoEDAL detector, deployed at Point 8 on the LHC ring, has a dual nature. First, it acts like a giant camera, comprised of nuclear track detectors - analyzed offline by ultra fast scanning microscopes - sensitive only to new physics. Second, it is uniquely able to trap the particle messengers of physics beyond the Standard Model for further study. MoEDAL's radiation environment is monitored by a state-of-the-art real-time TimePix pixel detector array.

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14/09/2016

While Canadians were winning medals at the Olympics in Rio de Janiero this summer, MoEDAL (pronounced "medal"), the only Canadian-led experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, celebrated its first published results.

14/09/2016

Today's selection of need-to-know updates from the world of physics

14/09/2016

Many theories predict the existence of magnetic monopoles, but experiments have yet to see them.

10/08/2016

Today, CERN sent out a press release on the MoEDAL experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to celebrate MoEDAL's first paper. Here is the text of the release:

"PR06.16

10.08.2016

The LHC MoEDAL experiment publishes its first paper on its search for magnetic monopoles

Geneva, 10 August 2016. In a paper published by the journal JHEP today, the MoEDAL experiment at CERN[1] narrows the window of where to search for a hypothetical particle, the magnetic monopole. Over the last decades, experiments have been trying to find evidence for magnetic monopoles at accelerators, including at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. Such particles were first predicted by physicist Paul Dirac in the 1930s but have never been observed so far.

“Today MoEDAL celebrates the release of its first physics result and joins the other LHC experiments at the discovery frontier," says Spokesperson of the MoEDAL experiment, James Pinfold.

Just as electricity comes with two charges, positive and negative, so magnetism comes with two poles, North and South. The difference is that while it’s easy to isolate a positive or negative electric charge, nobody has ever seen a solitary magnetic charge, or monopole. If you take a bar magnet and cut it in half, you end up with two smaller bar magnets, each with a North and South pole. Yet theory suggests that magnetism could be a property of elementary particles. So just as electrons carry negative electric charge and protons carry positive charge, so magnetic monopoles could in theory carry a North or a South pole.

If monopoles exist, they are believed to be very massive. As the LHC produces collisions at unprecedented energy, physicists may be able to observe such particles if they are light enough to be in the LHC’s reach. For instance, high-energy photon–photon interactions could produce pairs of North and South monopoles. Monopoles could manifest their presence via their magnetic charge and through their very high ionizing power, estimated to be about 4700 times higher than that of the protons. The MoEDAL experiment at the LHC is designed specifically to look at these effects.

MoEDAL is composed of a largely passive detector, installed next to the LHCb experiment. As monopoles would be highly ionizing, they would leave tracks in plastic detectors (NTDs) that are examined by a microscope afterwards. Monopoles would also lose their energy very quickly and could therefore be slowed down by another device consisting of 0.8 tonnes of aluminium detectors that act as a trap. A trapped monopole would signal its presence afterwards, when a magnetometer ‘scans’ the detectors for a magnetic charge. Additionally, MoEDAL includes an array of TimePix silicon pixel detectors used to monitor the experiment’s environment in real-time.

The paper published today is based on an analysis of data collected during the LHC’s first run, when the trapping detector was still a prototype. Although showing no evidence for trapped monopoles, the results have allowed the MoEDAL collaboration to place new mass limits, assuming a simple production mode of these hypothetical particles. They also provide a clear demonstration of the power of the MoEDAL detector, as the LHC delivers data at higher energy. The MoEDAL collaboration is now actively working on the analysis of data obtained with the full detector – including plastic NTDs and trapping detectors – in 2015, with the exciting possibility of revolutionary discoveries in a number of new physics scenarios.

The paper published today was signed by school students from the Simon Langton School, Canterbury, UK, which joined the MoEDAL collaboration in 2013, and the Institute for Research in Schools (IRIS), which aims is to bring first-class cutting-edge research into high-schools.


Link to the paper in arXiv.org: http://arxiv.org/abs/1604.06645

Link to the website of the MoEDAL collaboration: http://moedal.web.cern.ch/

Pictures: https://cds.cern.ch/record/2157891

https://cds.cern.ch/record/2162912

Videos: https://cds.cern.ch/record/1360998

https://cds.cern.ch/record/2206363

See also the latest paper of the ATLAS collaboration on monopole searches:

"Search for magnetic monopoles and stable particles with high electric charges in 8 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector" > Phys. Rev. D 93, 052009 –

http://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.93.052009

[1] CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, is the world's leading laboratory for particle physics. Its headquarters are in Geneva. Its Member States are: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom. Cyprus and Serbia are Associate Member States in the pre-stage to Membership. Pakistan and Turkey are Associate Member States. The European Union, India, Japan, JINR, the Russian Federation, UNESCO and the United States of America have Observer status.

Here is a great video that I made for the Royal Society Summer Show in 2015. It is called "Monopole Quest" and it explor...
10/08/2016

Here is a great video that I made for the Royal Society Summer Show in 2015. It is called "Monopole Quest" and it explores one of MoEDAL's key physics topics. Enjoy!

Monopole quest exhibit at the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition 2015: http://sse.royalsociety.org/2015/monopole-quest/. In the Large Hadron Collider th...

http://sse.royalsociety.org/2015/Come and see the MoEDAL-LHC experiment's exhibit at the Royal Society, Summer Science E...
24/06/2015

http://sse.royalsociety.org/2015/
Come and see the MoEDAL-LHC experiment's exhibit at the Royal Society, Summer Science Exhibition.

Information on the cutting-edge science exhibits on display at the Royal Society's 2015 Summer Science Exhibition.

A picture of the members of  MoEDAL  attending a MoEDAL Collaboration meeting at CERN in June 2014.
24/02/2015

A picture of the members of MoEDAL attending a MoEDAL Collaboration meeting at CERN in June 2014.

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