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Studying top quarks at high and not-so-high energies CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is famous for colliding protons at world-record energies--but sometimes it pays to dial down the energy and see what happens under less extreme conditions. The LHC started operation in 2010 with a collision energy of 7 TeV, and ran at 13 TeV from 2015 to 2018. But for one week in 2017, the LHC produced moderate-intensity collisions at only 5 TeV--allowing scientists to analyze the production of various elementary particles at a lower collision energy.
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