-
Man City's Foden to play through pain of broken hand
-
Milan Fashion Week showcases precision in uncertain times
-
Public media in Europe under unprecedented strain
-
Africa Cup of Nations refereeing gets a red card
-
Tributes pour in after death of Italian designer Valentino
-
Bills fire coach McDermott after playoff exit: team
-
Chile wildfires rage for third day, entire towns wiped out
-
Valentino, Italy's fashion king who pursued beauty at every turn, dies at 93
-
France PM to force budget into law, concedes 'partial failure'
-
Allies tepid on Trump 'peace board' with $1bln permanent member fee
-
'My soul is aching,' says Diaz after AFCON penalty miss
-
Ex-OPEC president in UK court ahead of corruption trial
-
Iran warns protesters who joined 'riots' to surrender
-
Stop 'appeasing' bully Trump, Amnesty chief tells Europe
-
Central African Republic top court says Touadera won 78% of vote
-
Trump tariff threat has global investors running for cover
-
Spectacular ice blocks clog up Germany's Elbe river
-
Trump says not thinking 'purely of peace' in Greenland push
-
Syria's Kurds feel disappointed, abandoned by US after Damascus deal
-
Man City sign Palace defender Guehi
-
Under-fire Frank claims backing of Spurs hierarchy
-
Prince Harry, Elton John 'violated' by UK media's alleged intrusion
-
Syria offensive leaves Turkey's Kurds on edge
-
Man City announce signing of defender Guehi
-
Ivory Coast faces unusual pile-up of cocoa at export hubs
-
Senegal 'unsporting' but better in AFCON final, say Morocco media
-
New charges against son of Norway princess
-
What is Trump's 'Board of Peace'?
-
Mbappe calls out Madrid fans after Vinicius jeered
-
Russians agree to sell sanctioned Serbian oil firm
-
Final chaos against Senegal leaves huge stain on Morocco's AFCON
-
Germany brings back electric car subsidies to boost market
-
Europe wants to 'avoid escalation' on Trump tariff threat: Merz
-
Syrian army deploys in former Kurdish-held areas under ceasefire deal
-
Louvre closes for the day due to strike
-
Prince Harry lawyer claims 'systematic' UK newspaper group wrongdoing as trial opens
-
Centurion Djokovic romps to Melbourne win as Swiatek, Gauff move on
-
Brignone unsure about Olympics participation ahead of World Cup comeback
-
Roger Allers, co-director of "The Lion King", dead at 76
-
Senegal awaits return of 'heroic' AFCON champions
-
Trump to charge $1bn for permanent 'peace board' membership: reports
-
Trump says world 'not secure' until US has Greenland
-
Gold hits peak, stocks sink on new Trump tariff threat
-
Champions League crunch time as pressure piles on Europe's elite
-
Harry arrives at London court for latest battle against UK newspaper
-
Swiatek survives scare to make Australian Open second round
-
Over 400 Indonesians 'released' by Cambodian scam networks: ambassador
-
Japan PM calls snap election on Feb 8 to seek stronger mandate
-
Europe readying steps against Trump tariff 'blackmail' on Greenland: Berlin
-
What is the EU's anti-coercion 'bazooka' it could use against US?
New giant particle collider 'right option for science': next CERN chief
The next head of Europe's CERN physics laboratory said Thursday that he favoured moving forward with plans for a giant particle collider that would dwarf the facility that discovered the famous "God particle".
"Scientifically, I am convinced it is the right option," Mark Thomson, whom CERN has tapped to be its next director-general, said of preliminary plans for the Future Circular Collider (FCC).
It is "the right option for CERN, the right option for science", the British physicist said during an online press conference a day after CERN said he would be taking the helm for a five-year term starting in January 2026.
"Absolutely I wish to pursue that route," he said.
The CERN lab, which straddles the border between France and Switzerland, seeks to unravel what the universe is made of and how it works.
Its Large Hadron Collider (LHC) -- a 27-kilometre (17-mile) proton-smashing ring running about 100 metres (330 feet) below ground -- has among other things been used to prove the existence of the Higgs boson -- dubbed the God particle -- which broadened the understanding of how particles acquire mass.
The LHC is expected to have fully run its course by around 2040, and CERN is considering building a far larger collider to allow scientists to keep pushing the envelope.
A feasibility study is under way for the 91-kilometre FCC, which CERN estimated earlier this year will cost around $17 billion.
Thomson, currently the executive chair of Britain's Science and Technology Facilities Council and an experimental particle physics professor at Cambridge University, hailed the efforts to fully grasp the costs involved, saying that a final decision was still several years off.
"There is time to build a very, very strong consensus around the project based on the clear scientific argument" for it, he said.
At CERN, Thomson will replace Italian physicist Fabiola Gianotti, who a decade ago was chosen as the first woman to lead the lab. She has also expressed support for the FCC project.
L.Wyss--VB