itschris

itschris

Moderator
They turned on the super collider and nothing bad happened just yet. The wife was being a pain the a$$ last night and I was kinda hoping a black hole would swoop her up into another universe and let the folks on the other side deal with her for awhile.
 
adk highlander

adk highlander

Sith Lord
The wife was being a pain the a$$ last night and I was kinda hoping a black hole would swoop her up into another universe and let the folks on the other side deal with her for awhile.
I hear what you are saying brother. Must have been something in the air.
 
majorloser

majorloser

Moderator
The wife was being a pain the a$$ last night and I was kinda hoping a black hole would swoop her up into another universe and let the folks on the other side deal with her for awhile.
Your's too? :confused:

Maybe it was the collider. :rolleyes:
 
1

10010011

Senior Audioholic
They turned on the super collider and nothing bad happened just yet.
Sure but they have not collided anything yet either. Only sent beams clockwise and counter clockwise.

The real "big bang" is coming in a couple months when they actually collide the beams.

GENEVA - Scientists at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) started up a huge particle-smashing machine on Wednesday, aiming to re-enact the conditions of the "Big Bang" that created the universe.
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the largest and most complex machine ever made and the platform for what experts say is the largest scientific experiment in human history.
Tests conducted inside the tightly-sealed chamber, buried under the Swiss-French border, could unlock the remaining secrets of modern physics and answer questions about the universe and its origins.
The 10 billion Swiss franc ($9 billion) machine's debut came as a blip on a screen in CERN's control room, with a particle beam the size of a human hair appearing in the tightly-sealed 27-kilometre circular tunnel.
"We've got a beam on the LHC," project leader Lyn Evans told his colleagues, who burst into applause at the news.
The several hundred physicists and technicians huddled in the control room later celebrated loudly again when a particle beam completed a trajectory of the accelerator in one direction, a key step a CERN spokeswoman described as "fantastic."
Scientists will next send a beam around the LHC in the other direction to test that the path is clear.
Once that is established, it will be possible to send beams in both directions simultaneously to create high-energy collisions at close to the speed of light.
Scientists around the world are eagerly anticipating data on those minuscule crashes. One possibility is that they will cause the creation of matter - proving correct the theory that there exists a "Higgs Boson" that gives matter its mass.
The elusive Higgs Boson is a theoretical particle, also known as a "God particle," and is named after Scottish physicist Peter Higgs, who first postulated in 1964 that it must exist.
Doomsday writers have also fanned fears that the experiment could create anti-matter, or black holes, spurring unprecedented public interest in particle physics ahead of the machine's start-up. CERN has insisted that such concerns are unfounded.
 
Adam

Adam

Audioholic Jedi
Sure but they have not collided anything yet either. Only sent beams clockwise and counter clockwise.
Beat me to it! Yep, it's going to be a little while until the real fun begins.
 
J

Joe Schmoe

Audioholic Ninja
If they do manage to create a tiny black hole, it might take time for it to grow to earth-swallowing proportions.:D
 
Midcow2

Midcow2

Banned
Tme-travlel!

If they do manage to create a tiny black hole, it might take time for it to grow to earth-swallowing proportions.:D
I'm holding my breath until they break the E=mc^2 fomula , can go faster than light and will really be able to time-travel. Just think you can go back in time and "un-screw-up" and then you won't ever have to say "I'm Sorry' :rolleyes:
 
E

EJ1

Audioholic Chief
I'm holding my breath until they break the E=mc^2 fomula , can go faster than light and will really be able to time-travel. Just think you can go back in time and "un-screw-up" and then you won't ever have to say "I'm Sorry' :rolleyes:
Too bad you'd only be able to go as far back as the creation of the time machine.
 
itschris

itschris

Moderator
I'm holding my breath until they break the E=mc^2 fomula , can go faster than light and will really be able to time-travel. Just think you can go back in time and "un-screw-up" and then you won't ever have to say "I'm Sorry' :rolleyes:
If that were the case, I'd spend my entire existing going back in time to fix my latest "I oughta not a done that" moment. I'm at the point where my wife just start to open her mouth and I say I'm sorry.
 
E

EJ1

Audioholic Chief
I gotta think about that one. Hmmmm.. what if the time machine went with you?
Ah, good point. My feeling is that if a time machine was going to be created (aka created in the future), then there would already be people walking around from the future. Perhaps we can only move forward in time, not back. I think my head is going to explode.
 
S

spacedteddybear

Audioholic Intern
Get our crowbars handy,

and prepare for unforeseen consequences.
 
Adam

Adam

Audioholic Jedi
Earlier this evening, I saw part of a short interview with Brian Greene in which he was discussing the creation of black holes by the collider. Long story short, he says that they are a non-issue.

Whew. I was worried there for a second. :rolleyes: :)
 
mtrycrafts

mtrycrafts

Seriously, I have no life.
Earlier this evening, I saw part of a short interview with Brian Greene in which he was discussing the creation of black holes by the collider. Long story short, he says that they are a non-issue.

Whew. I was worried there for a second. :rolleyes: :)
I was wondering what a micro black hole would suck in? Rip an electron from something and keep ripping them off until it has enough mass to go for bigger fish?:D
 
J

Joe Schmoe

Audioholic Ninja
I gotta think about that one. Hmmmm.. what if the time machine went with you?
As long as you are fantasizing about something that violates the laws of physics to begin with, why worry about such technicalities?:rolleyes:
 
itschris

itschris

Moderator
As long as you are fantasizing about something that violates the laws of physics to begin with, why worry about such technicalities?:rolleyes:
I'm a finance, economics, and law guy.. I don't really get physics too well, but I'm not sure anyone should feel too terribly comfortable knowing with specificity and precision what's going to happen when they eventually smash the beams. I believe the likelihood is that it will do exactly what they thought it would, but without precedent, how can you account for the unknowns.

Do I think the site will suddenly become blurry to the eye and dinosaurs will come popping out from another time? No I don't think so, but I do think unforseseen things could and will likely happen. Their importance or relavance may or may not be at all significant however.
 
newsletter

  • RBHsound.com
  • BlueJeansCable.com
  • SVS Sound Subwoofers
  • Experience the Martin Logan Montis
Top