If you're referring to the 'sound' a collision makes, then it's non-existent, as it all takes place inside the beam-pipe, which is held in a vacuum.
However, as a Ph.D student there (in ATLAS), I can say that the experiment's control room (above ground, away from all that radiation) has some great 'sound effects' for the various stages of the experiment (ramping up the energy,start of collisions, dumping the beam when it's depleted).
egozani145 karma
If you're referring to the 'sound' a collision makes, then it's non-existent, as it all takes place inside the beam-pipe, which is held in a vacuum.
However, as a Ph.D student there (in ATLAS), I can say that the experiment's control room (above ground, away from all that radiation) has some great 'sound effects' for the various stages of the experiment (ramping up the energy,start of collisions, dumping the beam when it's depleted).
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