LPI didn't just provide electrons and positrons to LEP, but also fed different experiments and test installations located directly at LPI's infrastructure. The first of these was the
Hippodrome Single Electron (HSE) experiment. The unusual request for single electrons was made in March 1988 by the
L3 collaboration. By the end of 1988, the setup was running, allowing for a precise calibration of the
L3 detector, which was to be installed at
LEP soon after. Those particles that were not deflected into EPA when coming from LIL, were directed straight into a "dump line". There, in the middle of the EPA ring, the
LIL Experimental Area (LEA) was set up. The electrons coming there were used for many different applications throughout LIL's operation, testing and preparing LEP's and later
LHC's detectors. Most famously, the optical fibres for one of
CMS's calorimeters were tested here in 2001 during the preparation time of the LHC. Additionally, the two
Synchrotron Light Facilities SLF 92 and SLF 42 used the
synchrotron radiation emitted by the electrons that were circling EPA. Until the beginning of 2001, the effects of synchrotron radiation on LHC's vacuum chambers were studied at SLF 92 with the COLDEX experiment. SLF 42 was used for research on
getter strips, which were getting prepared to be used in LHC's vacuum chambers. ==References==