Beyond these unremarkable doors lies the computing infrastructure that deals with data from the millions of particle collisions per second generated by the Large Hadron Collider.
The collider's circular tunnel, crossing between France and Switzerland at 50m to 175m below the surface, is home to seven experiments.
The two largest, Atlas and CMS, found the Higgs boson particle in 2012. Just last month the LHCb experiment, which is designed to look at the asymmetry between matter and anti-matter, discovered a new particle called the pentaquark.
Travelling in opposite directions around the 27km ring at close to the speed of light, two beams each contain up to 476 bunches of 100 billion protons, creating collisions every 50 nanoseconds.
With the raw data per event at about one million bytes, or 1MB, produced at a rate of about 600 million events per second, filtering has to take place to avoid the experiments being swamped with irrelevant data.
That still leaves the datacenter with the task of dealing with approximately 1.05GB per second.
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