
01-01-2012, 07:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bucco
...how does this story from December play into this....
"BATAVIA, Ill.-- The announcement to invest $20 million in capital funding for Fermilab was made Friday.
Governor Pat Quinn says the investment is part of his Illinois Jobs Now! initiative and that the money will be used for the construction of a new building. Additionally, 200 new high-tech jobs will be created from the expansion.
Ground was broken Friday on the new facility, which will be part of Fermilab's Illinois Accelerator Research Center Complex.
Governor Quinn says the new addition to the facility will put Illinois in the forefront of world technology. "
http://www.centralillinoisnewscenter...135747218.html
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I can't explain the state investment, Bucco. First, it's less than was needed to keep the accelerator operating. Second, according to the following post in Engadget, the Illinois' governor's announcement was made 2-3 months after the accelerator was permanently shut down...
From Engadget, Friday, 30 Sep 2011
The eyes of the physics community are collectively fixed upon Illinois today, where, later this afternoon, researchers at Fermilab will shut down the Tevatron particle accelerator... for good. That's right -- the world's second-largest collider is being laid to rest, after a remarkable 25-year run that was recently halted due to budgetary constraints. Earlier this year, Fermilab's scientists and a group of prominent physicists pleaded with the government to keep the Tevatron running until 2014, but the Energy Department ultimately determined that the lab's $100 million price tag was too steep, effectively driving a nail through the accelerator's subterranean, four-mile-long coffin.
First activated in 1985, the Tevatron scored a series of subatomic breakthroughs over the course of its lifespan, including, most notably, the discovery of the so-called top quark in 1995. Its groundbreaking technology helped pave the way for the Large Hadron Collider, which will now pursue the one jewel missing from the Tevatron's resume -- the Higgs boson. Many experts contend that the collider could've gone on to achieve much more, but its ride will nonetheless come to an inglorious end at 2 PM today, when Fermilab director Pier Oddone oversees the Tevatron's shutdown. "That will be it," physicist Gregorio Bernardi told the Washington Post.
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