accelerating science and innovation. science for peace cern was founded in 1954 as a science for...
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Ingo RUEHL / EN-HE
CERN was founded in 1954 as a Science for Peace Initiative by 12 European States
Member States: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria,
the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Israel,
Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland,
Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland and the United Kingdom
Candidate for Accession: Romania
Associate Members in Pre-Stage to
Membership: Serbia
Applicant States for Membership or
Associate Membership: Brazil, Cyprus
(awaiting ratification), Pakistan, Russia,
Slovenia, Turkey, Ukraine
Observers to Council: India, Japan,
Russia, Turkey, United States of America;
European Commission and UNESCO
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2300 staff: physicists, engineers, technicians, administrative personnel
1000 personnel on contract
11000 users who represent more than half of the living particle physicists originating from 500 universities and institutes and of more than 80 nationalities
Ingo RUEHL / EN-HE
The Mission of CERN
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Push forward the frontiers of knowledgee.g. the secrets of the Big Bang …what was the matter like within the first moments of the Universe’s existence?
Develop new technologies for accelerators and detectors
Information technology - the Web and the GRID
Medicine - diagnosis and therapy
Train the scientists and the engineers of tomorrow
Unite people from different countries and cultures
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AtomProton
Big Bang
Radius of Earth
Radius of Galaxies
Earth to Sun
Universe
cm
HubbleALMA VLT AMSLHC
Ingo RUEHL / EN-HE
The next scientific challenge is to understand the very first moments of our Universe after the Big Bang
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LHC
10-10s
Ingo RUEHL / EN-HE
The LHCA collider situated in a 100m underground 27 km (almost) circular tunnel which accelerates two proton beams to 7 TeV
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1982 : First studies1994 : Project Approved by the CERN Council1996 : Final Decision and start of the construction2004 : Installation Starts2006 : Hardware Commissioning Starts2008 : End of Hardware Commissioning2009-2030: Physics>
25 y
ears
10 GJ = 55 km/h
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CERN Structure
Director-General Rolf Heuer
Director for Research and Computing Sergio Bertolucci
Director for Accelerators and Technology Frédérick Bordry
Director for Administration and General Infrastructure Sigurd Lettow
Physics – PH Livio Mapelli
Information Technology – IT Frédéric Hemmer
Beams – BE Paul Collier
Technology – TE José Miguel Jiménez
Engineering – EN Roberto Saban
Human Resources – HR Anne-Sylvie Catherin
Finance, Procurement and Knowledge Transfer – FP Thierry Lagrange
General Infrastructure Services –GS Lluis Miralles Verge
Department Heads
Directorate
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The Engineering Department
Head of Department: R. SabanDeputy: S. Baird
Department Head Office(EN-HDO)R. Saban
Cooling & Ventilation (EN-CV)M. Nonis
Electrical Engineering (EN-EL)F. Duval
General Management & Secretariat(EN-GMS)S. Prodon
Handlling Engineering(EN-HE)I . Rühl
Industrial Controls & Engineering
(EN-ICE)Ph. Gayet
Machines & ExperimentalFacilities(EN-MEF)S. Baird
Mechanical & MaterialsEngineering(EN-MME)
F. Bertinelli
Sources, Targets & Interactions
(EN-STI )R. Losito
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The mandate of the Handling Engineering (HE) Group is to provide transport and handling services for the technical infrastructure of CERN, accelerators and experiments. This includes the design, the tendering/procurement, the installation, the commissioning, the operation, the maintenance and decommissioning of standard industrial and custom built transport and handling equipment.
EN-HE Group
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EN-HE Transport and Handling Equipment
350 Cranes / 800 Hoists
2000 Lifting Beams
80 Working Platforms
400 Lifting Equipment
100 Tractors
50 Special Vehicles
About 4000 assets in Total
130 Lifts
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Forthcoming Invitations to Tender
• IT-4056/EN – Nov. 2014 – Replacement of 12 LHC Lifts and Provision of Maintenance Service at CERN
• IT-xxxx/EN – Sept. 2015 - Replacement of 10 Lifts in Tertiary Buildings and Provision of Maintenance Service at CERN
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LHC lifts consolidation – overall schedule
Location Capacity (t - persons) Travelling height (m)
Landings Trips since commissioning
Time slot for consolidationExisting
liftsRequirements
PX24 0,63 - 8 1 – 14 51 3 705 705 December 2015 – February 2016, YETS
PZ85 1 – 13 2 - 22 104 2 1 035 752 December 2016 – February 2017, YETS
PM85 3 – 33 3 – 33 100 2 1 014 839 November 2017 – January 2018, YETS
PM76 1 – 13 2 - 22 97 2 337 396 July 2018 - August 2018, LS2
PZ45 1 – 13 2 - 22 144 2 232 845 September 2018 - October 2018, LS2
PM15 3 – 33 3 – 33 83 2 823 267 November 2018 - December 2018, LS2
PM25 3 – 33 3 – 33 45 2 1 062 543 January 2019 - February 2019, LS2
PZ33 1 – 13 2 - 22 99 2 325 430 March 2019 – April 2019, LS2
PM56 1 – 13 2 - 22 90 2 1 067 345 Mai 2019 – June 2019, LS2
PM65 3 – 33 3 – 33 94 2 687 372 July 2019 - August 2019, LS2
PM54 3 – 33 3 – 33 97 4 793 500 November 2019 – January 2020, Run 3
PX15 3 – 33 3 – 33 92 3 852 561 November 2020 – January 2021, YETS
Ingo RUEHL / EN-HE