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| | #21 (permalink) (top) |
| Igneous Magma Posts: 465 | And some scientists predicted that when they test exploded the first atomic bomb that ensuing explosion would ignite the entire atmosphere and destroy the world. Did not happen. Just as blackholes and magnetic monopoles will not happen when the LHC is turned on the very near future. |
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| | #22 (permalink) (top) |
| Evil Overlord Location: A Geofront, somewhere in Antarctica Posts: 938 | And you know this...how? Oh thats right, you don't. Its a HUGE risk. Theres not just a chance that our world will be destroyed if a black hole is inadvertently created, its guaranteed. Unless there is some immediate tangible benefit other than the furthering of knowledge that 99 percent of the worlds population cant understand or would care about, I say leave it off. I know your type. You think, "I'll just get me a costume, rip off the neighborhood kids." Next thing you know, you've got a jet shaped like a skull with lasers on the front! -The Monarch |
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| | #24 (permalink) (top) |
| I think I thunk Posts: 25 | I don't see why this is now becoming such an issue. People are over exaggerating the risks. Scientists have been using particle accelerators for decades, this is just a bigger one. The Earth didn't blow up when they discovered anti-matter and tried containing it in a stable environment. We have a greater chance of being killed by the asteroid in 40 years than we do getting sucked into a rogue black hole created by this. I make no claims to the level of my own intelligence, please be as critical as necessary and correct any mistakes I make as I am here for two reasons: 1.)To learn. 2.)Fun. |
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| | #26 (permalink) (top) | |
| I think I thunk Posts: 25 | Quote:
Previously particle accelerators led to the discovery of anti-matter helping scientists better understand and define certain laws of physics. With the studying of artificial black holes the scientists will be able to better theorize on the accuracy of the Big Bang theory, which will provide us answers to the ever allusive question of how the universe began. As for your question about advancing technology I refer you here: Google, I can provide a few to start you off though. Wikipedia Entry Stanford. Scroll to bottom FermiNews Particle acclerators benefit cosmology, astronomy, physics, medical science, and more. The fields benefited are greater than I want to list. If you can't appreciate the significance gained from the research using particle accelerators then you shouldn't be in a debate about them as even the ones worried about safety understand the advancements they lead to. As you can see, if you choose not to ignore, the benefits of particle accelerators to society extend beyond that of philosophy and physics. If you want more proof I challenge you to find it yourself, the burden of proof in discrediting these machines is on your hands. I make no claims to the level of my own intelligence, please be as critical as necessary and correct any mistakes I make as I am here for two reasons: 1.)To learn. 2.)Fun. | |
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| | #27 (permalink) (top) | |
![]() Igneous Magma Location: Iowa Posts: 568 | Quote:
I haven't seen any math, but the statistical chance that something really terrible is going to happen would have to break out of the decimals before stopping the experiment should even be seriously considered, and it probably hasn't gotten close. If love were all good, then it would be too boring to keep everyone's interest for as long as it has. -- K. H. Y. Everything that can be said, can be said clearly. -- Ludwig Wittgenstein | |
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| | #28 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Throbbing Member Location: Old Europe Posts: 6,446 | As someone who lives a 10-minute drive from the thing, I ought to be worried, especially as I don't (as usual, like 99.999999999999999999999999999999% of the rest of humanity) know who to believe in the, to me, arcane arguments involved. Nor did I know who to believe on the eve of the worldwide Y2K meltdown. "I wish I was as cocksure of anything as Tom Macaulay is of everything." -- Viscount Melbourne |
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| | #29 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Extemist Moderate Location: BCS Posts: 22 | I'll cut all you conspiracy theorists and doomsday sayers a deal. You provide me with ONE scientifically sound and undeniably plausible situation in which the earth may come to an end because of this LHC that is completely irrefutable by the CERN scientists, the most brilliant minds in physics this world has to offer. And for a moment I will consider your pleas. By the way, "It might create a black hole" is not a legitimate reason... not without scientific proof that a black hole could even possibly be formed by the LHC, which there is not. "Movies are made about stunning accomplishments, T.V. shows are made about bitter and ugly defeat." - Me |
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| | #30 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Extemist Moderate Location: BCS Posts: 22 | So if you know anything about black holes, and I am going to guess that most of you dont... you need matter to create a black hole, and a black hole is only as big as the matter you put into it. the specific gravity of two atoms will not be sufficient enough to gobble the planet up. "Movies are made about stunning accomplishments, T.V. shows are made about bitter and ugly defeat." - Me |
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| | #31 (permalink) (top) | |
| I'm a pushover Posts: 334 | Quote:
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| | #32 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Extemist Moderate Location: BCS Posts: 22 | see my second post where I clarify my statement... i wanted there to be an accurate timeline so i didn't edit the post. "Movies are made about stunning accomplishments, T.V. shows are made about bitter and ugly defeat." - Me |
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| | #34 (permalink) (top) |
| I'm a pushover Posts: 334 | I thought about responding to your second post, but I found the necessity to be demoralizing. Clearly, a two-proton black hole isn't going to have much effect, and may evaporate quickly. However, it is foolish to assume that those will be the only two protons around. If the black hole bumps another proton, it is 50% bigger, stronger, and ready for its next meal. The black hole, when created, would be far smaller than a proton, and so, very probably, will simply evaporate, even if there are more meals around, because it's too small and weak to find them. It could fall straight to the Earth's core, and never bump another bit of matter, if it lasts that long. However, it is very much like a snowball, rolling down a hill: once it does start collecting matter, it will become more able to collect. Every proton it consumes makes it that much more able to find and consume protons, until it grows large enough to gobble up molecules... and, at that point, it won't be evaporating any time soon, so it's odds of finding more fodder grow much higher, making it a near certainty that, eventually, it will consume the whole Earth. So, while even creating a black hole might not be terribly dangerous, the possibility of calamity remains. Of course, since the folks running the thing are utterly certain that no black hole will be created, they've made no preparations to contain the thing. At that small size, it would be very easy to control it... if they're at all ready for it. |
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| | #36 (permalink) (top) | |
| Volcanic Erupter Posts: 2,754 | Update Quote:
Colliding with nature's best-kept secrets - CNN.com Where the Energy comes from, guys ? :-) | |
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| | #38 (permalink) (top) | |
![]() Igneous Magma Location: New Hampshire Posts: 663 | Quote:
One variable is known; black holes either won't be made or will decay rapidly. This is because ultrahigh energy cosmic rays far beyond anything CERN will make bombard Earth and the surface of other planets all the time and we're still here. If there are no resulting black holes, meh, it will advance theoretical physics and probably not much else. If they can make a few and capture them in an electrostatic trap you will see all sorts of weird trippy technology. Destroying America one Volconvo post at a time. If you've ever come close to having a coronary about whether or not people walked on the moon you probably have a small penis. | |
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| | #39 (permalink) (top) |
![]() Seeking the Unknown Location: Southern California Posts: 911 | Well, i don't know too much about physics (yet , i'm going to take classes on it soon.) But if i'm correct, isn't the theory that black holes are made of a dense singularity of mass. I heard that the amount of mass in that singularity is massive. So, would this machine even be able to condense the amount of mass needed to create this singularity? If i'm wrong someone PLEASE correct me, i love to learn about physics and space ![]() Knowledge is power, and with it comes responsibility, use it well. |
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| | #40 (permalink) (top) |
| Uncomfortable Mind Posts: 357 | YouTube - The Large Hadron Collider: The End Of The Universe? Hope nobody else has posted this yet, but its a video that explains in a pretty entertaining way about the hadron collider, that most people could understand. As a side note, it might not be such a big deal if we did manage to instantaneously destroy ourselves. In my opinion, if its worth anything, humans are very self-important, and have mostly decided without a complete frame of reference, that they are either the purpose of the universe, or the most sophisticated and only worthwhile result of the universe. A sudden end to the human experience would result in a lot of happiness no longer being possible, but it would also result in the end of a lot of suffering. Considering the magnitude of what the doom sayers are saying might happen, it would be pretty much a neutral experience for us. Humans' comprehension of the universe would just cease, and the universe would go on doing whatever the hell it's doing, without us. |
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