Yet another bizarre accident has befallen the Large Hadron Collider. The enormous particle accelerator, buried deep beneath France and Switzerland, overheated when it was invaded by a piece of baguette, apparently dropped by a bird.
The Register reports that the bread entered machinery above ground. Honestly, they've spent over £3.5bn on the thing, you'd think CERN could afford a tarpaulin, or perhaps a Wendy house.
We're not ones for crude for national stereotyping, but the detail that the bird dropped a bit of baguette suggests this must have occurred on the French side of the LHC. It's unclear whether the bird was actually riding a bike, or indeed wearing onions and a beret.
The piece of bread caused the system to overheat to almost 8 Kelvin. Normal operating temperature is 1.9K. Had the LHC been turned on, this temperature spike would have shut down the system to prevent it approaching the 9.6K mark at which the niobium-titanium magnets quench, or stop superconducting. When this occurs, they revert to being ordinary magnets, turning the LHC into the world's biggest and most expensive toaster.
If the LHC was a sitcom, it would be written by Graham Linehan and it would be our favourite show. Interestingly, the head of the LHC computing-grid is one Ian Bird. Coincidence? We don't think so. Having failed to break the LHC during computer-related stress testing, conspiracy theorists may suspect Bird has turned to baked goods.
In fact, the increasingly bizarre incidents befalling the LHC are making us suspect the staff long ago realised the blessed thing wasn't going to work, and are having to come up with ever-more elaborate excuses. Our suspicions will no doubt be confirmed when Brian Cox tells New Scientist the cat ate his calculus.
Image credit: Puffin in Flight with Sandeels by Ed O'Keefe.
No idea what this LHC thing is? Watch our brilliant bluffer's guide!


Comments 11
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Anonymous 27 August, 2010 15:55
You yanks and your stereotypes, makes us feel less guilty about the ones we make about you.
You Americans would have never let any food go missing would you, particularly on that may contain a burger.
anonymous 13 October, 2011 01:17
to the other commenter:
lol except vegetarian americans like me :D
haha go drink your tea or something
anonymous 29 November, 2011 06:50
"Yanks"? Ummmm.... this is cnet "UK". Repeat, UK, NOT US! So you insulted the wrong people, which just further shows how small minded you are to first insult an entire nation for one persons words, and then to insult the WRONG nation as well.
anonymous 1 December, 2011 14:48
can't we all just get along...
i don't read anything produced for us inside the US - I am smarter than that...
I will gladly join you @ tea time!!!
anonymous 1 December, 2011 23:02
Oh french people, what are you like
anonymous 2 December, 2011 03:01
@anonmous ******* french people, comment fonctionnent-ils?
anonymous 2 December, 2011 10:29
To the 1st poster. Why would you assume the writer as from the US? Doesn't the Graham Linehan (Fr Ted, Big Train etc) reference give you a clue that he's probably British (or Irish) or were you just busting to aim a cheap shot at our trans-atlantic cousins?
anonymous 4 December, 2011 10:07
The people that write these troll articles are awesome creative, lol.
anonymous 7 December, 2011 17:17
'or indeed wearing onions and a beret.'
There was me thinking the stereotype was garlic, not onions.
This is honestly the poorest written news article I have ever read.
anonymous 11 December, 2011 18:30
Can anybody tell me how we're supposed to WEAR onions?? Nobody told me.Maybe that's why people look at me funny.....
anonymous 17 December, 2011 16:14
From the onion belt? Duh.