CERN ISR 

Some of the buildings associated with the ISR at CERN.  The accelerator itself is beneath the curved, tree-covered hill that runs around the outside of the road.
Some of the buildings associated with the ISR at CERN. The accelerator itself is beneath the curved, tree-covered hill that runs around the outside of the road.

Hadron Colliders: Past, Present, and Future

Intersecting Storage Rings CERN, 1971–1984
Super Proton Synchrotron CERN, 1981–1984
ISABELLE BNL, cancelled in 1983
Tevatron Fermilab, 1987–2009
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider BNL, operational since 2000
Superconducting Super Collider cancelled in 1993
Large Hadron Collider CERN, 2008–2020s
Very Large Hadron Collider mid-to-late 21st century

The ISR (Intersecting Storage Rings) was a particle accelerator at CERN. It was the world's first hadron collider, and ran from 1971 to 1984, with a maximum center of mass energy of 62 GeV. From its initial startup, the collider itself had the capability to produce particles like the J/ψ and the upsilon, as well as observable jet structure; however, the particle detector experiments were not configured to observe events with large momentum transverse to the beamline, leaving these discoveries to be made at other experiments in the mid-1970s. Nevertheless, the construction of the ISR involved many advances in accelerator physics, including the first use of stochastic cooling, and it held the record for luminosity at a hadron collider until surpassed by the Tevatron in 2004.

See also

External links

 This particle physics-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.