Estimating things that exist is generally easy, but when it comes to estimating things that do not exist, it's more difficult ...
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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 close to absolute zero. Human access is extremely limited, yet even tiny ...
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.
A 3.7 centimetre-wide robot has been designed to travel along the 27-kilometre Large Hadron Collider to allow remote ...
According to its developers, the “PipelNEER” is a small inspection device capable of inspecting beamline pipes in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), otherwise known as the world’s most powerful particle ...
The UK Atomic Energy Authority developed the robot with the European nuclear research centre, Cern.
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 ...
Scientists saw a quark plowing through primordial plasma for the first time, offering a rare look at the first moments after ...
This kind of ‘magic’ could lead to a computer revolution.
In the time it takes you to read this sentence, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will have smashed billions of particles ...
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 ...
Some people worried that the large hadron collider would smash particles together so hard it would make black holes that would swallow the earth, open wormholes to other dimension ...
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