Iran Press/Iran News: Asghar Gholami, a member of the Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Isfahan University of Technology, said: "In the CMS test, protons and heavy ions are accelerated in a 27-kilometer path and collide at speeds close to the speed of light to create new particles at the point of intersection."
Gholami added: "For the project, a joint group of Russian and Turkish researchers and a group of researchers from Isfahan University of Technology reviewed and presented the project, which was finally accepted by CERN judges."
Physicists and engineers at CERN use the world's largest and most complex scientific instruments to study the basic constituents of matter – fundamental particles.
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