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French And CERN Build Massive Particle Accelerator (Black Hole Generator) Unknown Planetary Risk To Create BIG BANG



 
 
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Old May 1st 08, 12:08 AM posted to rec.autos.simulators
Fritz
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Default French And CERN Build Massive Particle Accelerator (Black Hole Generator) Unknown Planetary Risk To Create BIG BANG

Which sim (66 mod??) u talking about?

"Doomsday Machine" > schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:qM4Sj.232108$pM4.116624@pd7urf1no...
> French And CERN Build Massive Particle Accelerator (Black Hole Generator)
> Unknown Planetary Risk To Create BIG BANG
>
> French Build Massive Particle Accelerator (Black Hole Generator)
> Old Dying Physicists want to go out with a BIG BANG
>
> What are we talking about?
>
> Many helpful Links and Video links at end of post.
>
> http://lhcconcerns.com/
>
> In May of 2008 the largest, most expensive scientific experiment, The
> Large
> Hadron Collider will be completed. This mechanical behemoth located along
> the French and Swiss border with a total estimated circumference of 17
> miles
> will be the most powerful particle accelerator in existence. The principal
> behind a particle accelerator is that by speeding up the smallest elements
> of matter and then colliding them together that they can be broken down
> further into even smaller fundamental particles, just as Atoms were once
> thought to be the smallest units, so then were Quarks(Up and Down),
> Electrons, and Protons discovered.
>
> The Large Hadron Collide is hoped to discover what is referred to as the
> "Higgs Boson". Although a theoretical scalar particle theorized by Peter
> Higgs in 1974, it is actually a member of the standard model, and it is
> believed that the Higgs Boson is what gives matter "mass". To achieve the
> observation of the Higgs Boson, the LHC will be smashing these Hadrons
> (specifically Protons) together at speeds almost unimaginable to the
> average
> person, at near c( .99999999 % the speed of light).
>
> To quantify the types of collisions, it must be pointed out that two beams
> will be set to collide with each other, each beam of protons contains
> roughly 2,800 Protons with an energy of 7 TeV (1 Teraelectron Volt =
> 1.60217646 x 10-7 joules) so the combined energies will be 14 TeV.
> Although
> such energies in collisions are certainly occurring every day in space,
> this
> will be the first time that energies such as these will be observed on
> Earth, however what is alarming to us are the myriad of other
> possibilities
> that could arise.
>
> Why haven't I heard about this before?
>
> Honestly, this is a good question, I seem to come accross this response a
> lot, it seems that in general most people have never heard of the LHC, or
> even particle acclerators in general, I am aware that there has been a lot
> more coverage of this in the UK then the America's (probably due to it's
> geographical location), but also I suppose the main reason why it is not
> covered that often in the states is because of a general lack of interest,
> or the belief that the general public is probably incapable of
> understanding
> something so complex. Still however there are several Documentaries and
> other programs/magazines that have covered the LHC, so I'm not fully sure
> why some people have not heard about this as from a financial perspective
> it's the most expsenive (8.2 Billion Dollars) and most powerful scientific
> Expirement of al time.
>
> Why We're Concerned
>
> To explain the concern thoroughly and accurately it has to be stated that
> the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva is not the first particle accelerator
> in
> history. In 1929 the Cyclotron, invented and developed by Ernest O.
> Lawrence, was the first particle accelerator, and from that initial
> invention over several decades we have come into a new breed of Larger and
> More Powerful Particle Accelerators. Although we have had particle
> accelerators in the past, The luminosity at which these operate has
> increased dramatically, in fact it is true that prior to the construction
> of
> the RHIC (Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider) such theories as MBH
> Production,
> Strangelets, and several other theories were placed on the table as
> relevant
> possibilities.
>
> So, what's different this time?
>
> This is the point that has to be emphasized, this time things are quite
> different, a study was conducted after initial concerns for the RHIC were
> explored, and to their conclusion the amount of energy necessary for these
> scenarios was not sufficient. The Large Hadron Collider operates at a
> total
> combined energy of 14TeV, which is a lot higher than the energies
> generated
> by the RHIC, as such the possibility of Black Hole creation is a reality,
> in
> fact on CERN's own web site they admit it could create Black Holes, here
> is
> an excerpt from Safety at the LHC
>
> "If the LHC can produce microscopic black holes, cosmic rays of much
> higher energies would already have produced many more. Since the Earth is
> still here, there is no reason to believe that collisions inside the LHC
> are
> harmful. Black holes lose matter through the emission of energy via a
> process discovered by Stephen Hawking. Any black hole that cannot attract
> matter, such as those that might be produced at the LHC, will shrink,
> evaporate and disappear. The smaller the black hole, the faster it
> vanishes.
> If microscopic black holes were to be found at the LHC, they would exist
> only for a fleeting moment. They would be so short-lived that the only way
> they could be detected would be by detecting the products of their decay."
> We'll cover the theoretical problem of this statement in the next section.
>
> So, what's the problem?
>
> In theory (according to Hawking Radiation) any Black Hole created would
> evaporate in Femtoseconds, not having the chance to accrete any mass, and
> being essentially harmless, although this is comforting in theory, It has
> never been proven, and in fact has been questioned before. The problem is
> that although most people in the physics community believe in Hawkings
> Radiation, it has no basis in observation. In 2003 Adam D. Helfer
> Published
> a paper concerning Hawking's Radiation coming to the conclusion that
> Hawking's Radiation may in fact be incorrect, and that a Black Hole would
> not lose mass in such a way. (For the full text of this document go here
> Paper By Adam D. Helfer on Hawking Radiation.)
>
> In fact since the LHC has been on the drawing board several studies and
> theories which have gained a lot of support in the scientific community
> such
> as "String Theory" and "Extra-Large Hidden Dimensions" have surfaced,
> which
> do indeed place the threshold for Black Hole Creation much lower than
> previously thought.
>
> The main problem lies in believing in theory as fact, every argument for
> safety made concerning Black Holes and thier creation immediately
> references
> Hawking Radiation, however, if Hawking Radiation turns out to be incorrect
> then the Black Hole would continue to accrete mass at an exponential rate.
>
> Now Hold on, No one would willingly create a machine that would create
> Black
> Holes on Purpose?
>
> Of course not, I highly doubt the thousands of scientists involved wish to
> usher in Oblivion any quicker than politicians, however the danger lies in
> Theory being accepted as Fact, Adam D. Helfer Published a paper recently
> which outlines a very strong possibility that Hawkings Radiation may in
> fact
> not exist, which would actually fit in better with the Laws of
> Thermodynamics, at which Our current explanation and understanding of the
> nature of Black Holes has always been somewhat at Odds.
>
> Alright, so if a Black Hole created doesn't evaporate, what next?
>
> Here is another place that CERN's safety assessment is incapable of
> addressing, although these extremely high energy collisions each Proton
> beam
> is in fact coming from opposite directions, Over 2 thousand Protons in
> each
> beam will pretty much collide roughly in the middle, although no collision
> would create a particle exactly dead center, or "still", in a relative
> sense
> any MBH or fundamental particle created in such a manner (even with both
> beams at a speed of .99999999 c) would be in a relative sense, at Rest, or
> to elaborate the term at rest we mean lower than the necessary escape
> velocity to escape the Earth's own gravitational pull.
>
> At that point two hypothetical scenarios exist. It would either maintain a
> rather low orbit within our planet itself, slowly accreting mass at an
> exponential rate, or it's possible it may "gravitate" to the direct center
> of the planet in which case would accrete mass very quickly
>
> Wait a second, I've also heard of other dangers like "Strange Matter",
> "Bubble Nucleation", and "Magnetic Monopoles", why the focus on Black
> Holes?
>
> It is true that these scenarios are also possible, however the problem
> with
> representing them accurately is the true danger can never be quantified as
> None of these have been observed, however that does not mean the risk is
> zero. The very fact that this experiment is called an experiment is the
> prove a hypothesis, if the results were truly known then this would not be
> occurring in the first place.
>
> The Large Hadron Collider is going to be forcing Protons together in a
> very
> unnatural way, not only forcing them into groups of roughly 3,000 protons
> for the collisions, but exposing them to temperatures colder than space as
> well (1.9 K or -271 C). These types of collisions in a sense are unnatural
> because collisions at those speeds and temperature would never happen,
> meaning at the point of activation, no one will truly know these results
> until they occur, in a matter of Femtoseconds we would be placing the
> entire
> world in potential Danger. I've seen many websites calculate
> possiblity/problem or a percentage of risk, however without many of these
> theories as proof, there is no accurate way to calcuate them, So although
> the risk potential is unknown, the risk can never be calculated at zero.
>
> Although the credence given Strange Matter production, and it's subsequent
> catalytic behavior by the scientific community is not always mutual.
> Certain
> types of Strange Matter could be formed that would catalytically convert
> all
> matter that it touches into strange matter as well, although this is not
> as
> likely as creating a Black Hole, it's worth mentioning because it is a
> possibility.
>
> I want to learn more, where can I go?
>
> The internet is a good place, it brought you here, didn't it? Of course
> you
> could always visit the links on the site, and take part in our discussion
> on
> the forum, I would recommend familiarizing yourself with all the issues,
> and
> a basic understanding of Black Holes won't hurt either, of course I can
> always recommend reading A Brief History of Time or the Universe in a
> Nutshell there is always Google, for as many people as there are
> concerned,
> there are people who believe the danger is zero, it's important for you,
> to
> properly evaluate the facts and come to your own conclusion, of course we
> would like your support, however, the goal of this web site is
> information,
> discussion, action, and rationale, we are real people after all, and so
> are
> you.
>
> Thinking outside the box can't hurt either, I encourage you to Talk to a
> Professor at a local college, write a Letter to CERN, do whatever you need
> to do to inform yourself and make an informed decision, any contribution
> you
> make, even discussing with one other single person in the world, has the
> possibility to make all the difference.
>
> Links..
>
> Large Hadron Collider
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_Hadron_Collider
>
> CERN
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CERN
>
> LHC Concerns
>
> http://lhcconcerns.com/
>
> National Geograhic - The God Particle
>
> http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/20...achenbach-text
>
> BBC News - Lab Fireball May Have Been Black Hole
>
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4357613.stm
>
> An Open Letter To Stephen Hawking
>
> http://lhcconcerns.com/LHCConcerns/F...c.php?f=2&t=72
>
> Black Holes On Demand (George Street Journal)
>
> http://www.brown.edu/Administration/.../26GSJ10a.html
>
> CBC News - LHC
>
> http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/science/lhc.html
>
> New York Times - LHC Dangerous?
>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/sc...rssnyt&emc=rss
>
> LHC Legal Defense Fund
>
> http://www.lhcdefense.org/
>
> MySpace STOP CERN Website
>
> http://www.myspace.com/stopcern
>
> LHC Risk Evaluation Forum
>
> http://www.risk-evaluation-forum.org/
>
> YouTube music Video Of The Atom Smasher (LHC) Black Hole Generator
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOFSrS03wjE#GU5U2spHI_4
>
> French Build Doomsday Machine
>
> http://www.misunderstooduniverse.com...ay_Machine.htm
>
> U-Tube Videos
>
> Documentery
>
> Large Hadron Collider - The Search For The Higgs [1 of 3]
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fJ6P...eature=related
>
> Large Hadron Collider - The Search For The Higgs [2 of 3]
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQNPp...eature=related
>
> Large Hadron Collider - The Search For The Higgs [3 of 3]
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XbKZ...eature=related
>
> The Large Hadron Collider: The End Of The Universe?
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPxYd...eature=related
>
>
>



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