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Meet 'PipeINEER' – the AI-trained robot mice scurrying about in the Large Hadron Collider
Deep inside CERN’s vast particle accelerator, engineers face a difficult task: inspecting narrow vacuum pipes that operate ...
Estimating things that exist is generally easy, but when it comes to estimating things that do not exist, it's more difficult ...
A 3.7 centimetre-wide robot has been designed to travel along the 27-kilometre Large Hadron Collider to allow remote ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Mouse-sized robot to inspect 17-mile pipes of world’s most powerful particle collider
Engineers from the UK Atomic Energy Authority robotics center, RACE (Remote Applications in Challenging ...
UK scientists and the UK Atomic Energy Authority have developed a mouse-sized robot to inspect the Large Hadron Collider on the Swiss-French border.
This Is a Big Deal! exclaims Geoff Brumfiel at Nature: "I can't think of another case where the future of an entire field hinges on the success of a single experiment...It could verify current ...
In collisions at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider, hotter than the Sun’s core by a staggering margin, scientists have finally solved a long-standing mystery: how delicate particles like deuterons and ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s most powerful particle collider upgrade enters next phase with giant cold boxes
CERN engineers have transported two gleaming cryogenic “cold boxes” deep into the tunnels of ...
CERN's accelerator operators have just fired the starting pistol for the last run of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). At the end of June, four years of work will begin to transform the LHC into a high ...
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