CERN's 17-Mile-Long Atom Smasher To Re-Enact 'Big Bang'

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ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS | September 7, 2008 02:52 PM EST | AP

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This undated photo provided by CERN on Friday, Sept. 5, 2008 shows a view into the Grid PC farm at the CERN Computer Centre, where banks of computers process and store data produced on the CERN systems. When the LHC starts operation in September 2008, it will produce enough data every year to fill a stack of CDs 20 km tall. To handle this huge amount of data, CERN has also developed the Grid, allowing processing power to be shared between computer centres around the world. (AP Photo/CERN) ** MANDATORY CREDIT: CERN * NO SALES *

GENEVA — It has been called an Alice in Wonderland investigation into the makeup of the universe _ or dangerous tampering with nature that could spell doomsday.

Whatever the case, the most powerful atom-smasher ever built comes online Wednesday, eagerly anticipated by scientists worldwide who have awaited this moment for two decades.

The multibillion-dollar Large Hadron Collider will explore the tiniest particles and come ever closer to re-enacting the big bang, the theory that a colossal explosion created the universe.

The machine at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, promises scientists a closer look at the makeup of matter, filling in gaps in knowledge or possibly reshaping theories.

The first beams of protons will be fired around the 17-mile tunnel to test the controlling strength of the world's largest superconducting magnets. It will still be about a month before beams traveling in opposite directions are brought together in collisions that some skeptics fear could create micro "black holes" and endanger the planet.

The project has attracted researchers of 80 nationalities, some 1,200 of them from the United States, which contributed $531 million of the project's price tag of nearly $4 billion.

"This only happens once a generation," said Katie Yurkewicz, spokeswoman for the U.S. contingent at the CERN project. "People are certainly very excited."

The collider at Fermilab outside Chicago could beat CERN to some discoveries, but the Geneva equipment, generating seven times more energy than Fermilab, will give it big advantages.

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The CERN collider is designed to push the proton beam close to the speed of light, whizzing 11,000 times a second around the tunnel 150 to 500 feet under the bucolic countryside on the French-Swiss border.

Once the beam is successfully fired counterclockwise, a clockwise test will follow. Then the scientists will aim the beams at each other so that protons collide, shattering into fragments and releasing energy under the gaze of detectors filling cathedral-sized caverns at points along the tunnel.

CERN dismisses the risk of micro black holes, subatomic versions of collapsed stars whose gravity is so strong they can suck in planets and other stars.

But the skeptics have filed suit in U.S. District Court in Hawaii and in the European Court of Human Rights to stop the project. They unsuccessfully mounted a similar action in 1999 to block the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York state.

CERN's collider has been under construction since 2003, financed mostly by its 20 European member states. The United States and Japan are major contributors with observer status in CERN.

Scientists started colliding subatomic particles decades ago. As the machines grew more powerful, the experiments revealed that protons and neutrons _ previously thought to be the smallest components of an atom _ were made of still smaller quarks and gluons.

CERN hopes to recreate conditions in the laboratory a split-second after the big bang, teaching them more about "dark matter," antimatter and possibly hidden dimensions of space and time.

Meanwhile, scientists have found innovative ways to explain the concept in layman's terms.

The team working on one of the four major installations in the tunnel _ the ALICE, or "A Large Ion Collider Experiment" _ produced a comic book featuring Carlo the physicist and a girl called Alice to explain the machine's investigation of matter a split second after the Big Bang.

"We create mini Big Bangs by bumping two nuclei into each other," Carlo explains to Alice, who has just followed a rabbit down one of the hole-like shafts at CERN.

"This releases an enormous amount of energy that liberates thousands of quarks and gluons normally imprisoned inside the nucleus. Quarks and gluons then form a kind of thick soup that we call the quark-gluon plasma."

The soup cools quickly and the quarks and gluons stick together to form protons and neutrons, the building blocks of matter.

That will enable scientists to look for still missing pieces to the puzzle _ or lead to the formulation of a new theory on the makeup of matter.

Kate McAlpine, 23, a Michigan State University graduate at CERN, has produced the Large Hadron Rap, a video clip that has attracted more than a million views on YouTube.

"The things that it discovers will rock you in the head," McAlpine raps as she dances in the tunnel and caverns.

CERN spokesman James Gillies said the lyrics are "absolutely scientifically spot on."

"It's quite brilliant," Gillies said.

___

On the Net:

CERN: http://www.cern.ch

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory: http://www.fnal.gov

The U.S. at the LHC: http://www.uslhc.us/

Large Hadron Rap: http://www.youtube.com/watch?vf6aU-wFSqt0

GENEVA — It has been called an Alice in Wonderland investigation into the makeup of the universe _ or dangerous tampering with nature that could spell doomsday. Whatever the case, the most powe...
GENEVA — It has been called an Alice in Wonderland investigation into the makeup of the universe _ or dangerous tampering with nature that could spell doomsday. Whatever the case, the most powe...
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Damn.

Didn't these folks see "THE MIST"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 AM on 09/08/2008
- cylindar I'm a Fan of cylindar 7 fans permalink

The machine is a giant piece of expensive garbage. The only black holes that will be created are in the pants of the workers scrubbing down the parts between collisions. People will be surprised at what this expensive boondoggle will not tell us. This device has to be the dumbest idea since light-up coasters for party drinks. Some scientists have fooled various governments into thinking that bigger and faster is better, when in fact they are going to find out that slower and smaller is better--cheaper too!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 09/07/2008
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i'm not sure you get the concept...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 AM on 09/08/2008

... or the idea, or the notion, or anything else approaching substantive or wise.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 AM on 09/08/2008
- blico I'm a Fan of blico 47 fans permalink
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Can you imagine all the people that don't want to work could be fed with the money spent on this!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 AM on 09/08/2008
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Yeah, I'm going to miss Fermilab too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:47 AM on 09/08/2008
- GunOfSod I'm a Fan of GunOfSod 2 fans permalink

Umm the LHC isn't trying to create black holes, as for the rest of your rant. You're a tool.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 AM on 09/08/2008

black holes are more likely to result if mccain/palin is elected

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 PM on 09/07/2008
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It would suck if the universe were blown to smitherines. That's where I keep all my stuff.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 PM on 09/07/2008
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You're post is 100% win.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 AM on 09/08/2008
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lol!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 AM on 09/08/2008
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Hahahaha.

*Whew*

I wish I'd said that hehe.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 AM on 09/08/2008

Why call it a black hole? I think it's racist. And sexist too. Maybe we should call it Alaska. A lot of stuff seems to disappear there too - money, memories, and meese (?).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 PM on 09/07/2008
- coyote4 I'm a Fan of coyote4 70 fans permalink
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A new report published on Friday, 5 September, provides the most comprehensive evidence available to confirm that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)'s switch-on, due on Wednesday next week, poses no threat to mankind.

Nature's own cosmic rays regularly produce more powerful particle collisions than those planned within the LHC, which will enable nature's laws to be studied in controlled experiments.

The report also concludes that, since cosmic-ray collisions are more energetic than those in the LHC, but are incapable of producing strangelets, vacuum bubbles or dangerous magnetic monopoles, we should not fear their creation by the LHC.

http://www.physorg.com/news139810863.html

*
Okay, but consider that when we enter the center of the Galactic plane in 2012, when the sun and the earth line up with the black hole at the center of the Milky Way, that there may be a force (forces) that could influence us.

Consider that there is a force that causes our galaxy to spin in a flat disk and that upon moving from the bottom through the center (2012) and to the upper side is akin to moving from a negative into a positive charge.

And there is more, but_Arianna_does not allow me the space to say

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 PM on 09/07/2008
- RedDogBear I'm a Fan of RedDogBear 66 fans permalink
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Or consider that you don't know what the heck you are talking about. There are four fundamental forces in nature: Gravity, electro-magnetic, strong nuclear, and weak nuclear. Which of these forces are you alluding to?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 09/07/2008
- Swerinjer I'm a Fan of Swerinjer 9 fans permalink

why is the presumed tone always obnoxiousness? I'm sick of unnecessary insults. It totally reveals the true nature of americans in the way they interact when they are anonymous.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 09/07/2008

It's far more likely that there is only one or at most two fundamental forces in nature and the four you refer to are merely aspects of it/them - this is the so-called "Theory of Everything" which the LHC is another small step on the way to discover.

However it's pretty certain that whatever the LHC does come up with there will only be a few hundred people in the whole world with the expertise and understanding to actually comprehend it. The rest of us will just have to nod our heads sagely and say "Uh-huh!"

And while I'm one of the latter group I'm still gratified that 'we' are still prepared to spend billions of dollars looking for the answer to a question that will have no practical use whatever - just as the US did putting man on the moon - as it does go to the very heart of our existence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 PM on 09/07/2008
- Aramingo I'm a Fan of Aramingo 18 fans permalink
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Hmmm... My understanding is that the electro-magnetic and weak nuclear forces were unified some time in the late '70s and are now known as the electro-weak force. As for the last two paragraphs of the original post, well, they sound like that harmonic resonance we were all supposed to experience when the planets aligned.

Garvity and the yet to be characterized dark energy/dark matter are responsible for the shape of galaxies. At least that's what I've read in Science, Nature, Scientific American, and Science News.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 AM on 09/08/2008
- Aramingo I'm a Fan of Aramingo 18 fans permalink
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Obviously, that should read "Gravity", not "Garvity". Garvity is the force field surrounding former LA Dodger great, Steve Garvey.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 AM on 09/08/2008

Rather than worrying about the astronomically remote chance of a freak particle physics scenario that exists only in theory, it would be more useful to worry about man-made global warming. It's supported by a broad scientific consensus and it's already heaving measurable effects. If I were laying down chips in a Vegas casino, I'd place my bet on human life getting destroyed by global warming long before some mini-black hole in CERN.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 PM on 09/07/2008
- GunOfSod I'm a Fan of GunOfSod 2 fans permalink

Don't try and sway me with facts!! I find pure unfounded conjecture to be far more exciting!!!

I personally think Baby Jesus will save a select few of us, and cats., from the inevitable catastrophe!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 AM on 09/08/2008

I concur, has the past decade not proven anything. Facts are meaningless in American discourse. It is all gut feeling, instant response, ignorance and prejudice that should/has be the "logical" outline for all decisions made.

Now my only question is which jesus are you talking about rescuing us, the baby jesus in the gold diaper, or the party jesus in the tuxedo shirt.

/obscure will ferrell reference

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 09/08/2008
- DogTown I'm a Fan of DogTown 9 fans permalink
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Sarah Palin doesn't believe in this so it isn't real.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 PM on 09/07/2008
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I take it you don't remember the 'black hole' incident at Brookhaven 3 years ago.......­.....


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4357613.stm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:39 PM on 09/07/2008
- Heyman I'm a Fan of Heyman 2 fans permalink

I read about this two weeks ago. The "critics" are professors and scholars.
Remember HAARP? We still don't know what HAARP can do.
A mini black hole? Doesn't sound to promising.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 PM on 09/07/2008
- RedDogBear I'm a Fan of RedDogBear 66 fans permalink
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Just because they are professors doesn't mean they know what they are talking about. Many of the creationist proponents also have PhDs, but they are PhDs in religion or areas other than biology. I suspect the same thing for these people. Although I would be interested in reading what they have to say. You should post a link to the critics you think are the most convincing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:08 PM on 09/07/2008
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KQuarksSup­erCollider­:

I sure would like to get your take on this. Is it the end for us. Will it open a black hole that will swallow us?

Stark

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 PM on 09/07/2008
- ohmercy I'm a Fan of ohmercy 25 fans permalink

well, at least this aggravating, nail biter of an election will be a thing of the "past."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 PM on 09/07/2008
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LOL! I'm about ready by now! Anything would be better than this!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 09/08/2008
- Andrew Koenig - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Andrew Koenig permalink

Watch the Large Hadron Rap: http://www.youtube.com/watch?vf6aU-wFSqt0

It's hysterical and if you're not careful, you might just learn something.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:48 PM on 09/07/2008

Hey andrew,

thanks for posting this. I am a physicist working on one of the experiments at this accelerator; my experiment is called ATLAS (it's an acronym for A ToroidaL ApparatuS - yeah, I know it's lame ;-)). If you go to http://atlas.ch/, you'll find a lot of stuff for non-scientists.

On Sept. 10, one beam will be circulated all the way around the accelerator, and then sometime later both beams will circulate. Hopefully, we will see collisions before the end of the year.

Exciting times!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 09/07/2008
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j50ZssEojtM

I think this is the link you meant....

(The other one has: 10 yr old boy declares war on the world haha)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 AM on 09/08/2008
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Not bad for a bunch of white folks LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 09/08/2008

End of the world stuff.
Bullshit sliced diiced and excommunicated.

I can't wait to see the results of this the cowardly christers think that IF they make a big enough. to do that they can weigh in with positive appeal. Yeah but not here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:44 PM on 09/07/2008
- gnomic I'm a Fan of gnomic 11 fans permalink

Critics are idiots who what too much science fiction and didn't take enough science classes.

Lets grant the statistically insignificant chance that CERN actually creates a quantum black hole. That's a really, really, really small black hole. Since its created by energetic collisions and is, as stated, really, really, really small, it is not stable and will evaporate in a millisecond. That a really, really, really small amount of time, before it can suck enough mass in to become stable.

Statistically speaking, there is a much, much, much larger chance that aliens will visit earth and decide to destroy it because we didn't turn CERN on and don't know enough about science to survive.

Where do I file that frivolous lawsuit?

The best thing we can do is point and laugh at stupid people like this, whether they spout this brand of nonsense or advocate creationism. Then we need to beat them with real science until they realize how shamefully stupid they are that then never enter public discourse again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:38 PM on 09/07/2008
- roald I'm a Fan of roald 16 fans permalink

As a reader of science fiction, I would like to respond that good science fiction is very much in line with science theory at the time the story is written and often delves into societal reactions to the science. Really good science fiction is written by physicists and people who hang out with physicists. More likely the critics (1) do not read or (2) read fantasy and mistake it for science fiction.

Beyond that, I really liked your post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:15 AM on 09/08/2008

Agreed. Brilliant. But the su;per collier in Txas would have been better.

Bush people handingover the U S of A to the Russians. No war in Georgia./ But dont let your child get pregers
Do I really need to explain?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 PM on 09/07/2008
- gnomic I'm a Fan of gnomic 11 fans permalink

No worries. Palin is running foreign policy in Alaska so the GOP says we're covered there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:47 PM on 09/07/2008
- z2 I'm a Fan of z2 permalink

Only releases 'quarks' and 'gluons', which then coalesces into a thick soup called quark-gluon plasma.

How reassuring.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 PM on 09/07/2008
- gnomic I'm a Fan of gnomic 11 fans permalink

I can not wait to see this on the Food Network.

Booby Flay shows up for a quark-gluon soup throwdown, uses a few spicy leptons in a Bose Einstein condensate with extra crispy tachyons.

YUM!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 PM on 09/07/2008
- Dap I'm a Fan of Dap 51 fans permalink
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What I need to know is, Cabernet or Riesling?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 AM on 09/08/2008
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Cindy will claim it as one of her family recipes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 09/08/2008
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