Difference between revisions of "Talk:Large Hadron Collider"

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Just wanted to add,  from what I have heard of/researched a bit about the LHC, the actual danger is that stranglets (a theoretical type of quark) could be potentially created and trapped within the earth's gravitational field, thus transforming all matter on earth to strange matter. Will get verification and modify as necessary. Also, I do not believe scientists at CERN actually ''deny'' the possibility, but rather the chances are so monumentally low (I have heard on the order of 1x10^-12%) that it is essentially more likely that the Earth will be destroyed in other ways. I will research this a bit and modify the article with proper citations. Cheers --[[User:AndrasK|AndrasK]] 18:32, 9 September 2008 (EDT)
 
Just wanted to add,  from what I have heard of/researched a bit about the LHC, the actual danger is that stranglets (a theoretical type of quark) could be potentially created and trapped within the earth's gravitational field, thus transforming all matter on earth to strange matter. Will get verification and modify as necessary. Also, I do not believe scientists at CERN actually ''deny'' the possibility, but rather the chances are so monumentally low (I have heard on the order of 1x10^-12%) that it is essentially more likely that the Earth will be destroyed in other ways. I will research this a bit and modify the article with proper citations. Cheers --[[User:AndrasK|AndrasK]] 18:32, 9 September 2008 (EDT)
 
:It was just a start. I know of the "strange matter" issue but I also know the major concern was the mini black holes being formed. [[User:ClarkeD|ClarkeD]] 18:34, 9 September 2008 (EDT)
 
:It was just a start. I know of the "strange matter" issue but I also know the major concern was the mini black holes being formed. [[User:ClarkeD|ClarkeD]] 18:34, 9 September 2008 (EDT)
 +
:: To be clear, there is no concern in the scientific community. If there was they wouldn't have built the LHC (or any other supercollider) in the first place. As for the microscopic black holes, even if despite the infinitesimal odds one did form, it would die out nearly instantly due to Hawking radiation. It wouldn't have a large enough mass to sustain itself. You'd need something massive (a star) in order to create a self-sustaining black hole. There is ''nothing'' to be worried about. --[[User:Rspeed|Rspeed]] 00:33, 12 September 2008 (EDT)

Revision as of 04:33, September 12, 2008

Will get to this later

Just wanted to add, from what I have heard of/researched a bit about the LHC, the actual danger is that stranglets (a theoretical type of quark) could be potentially created and trapped within the earth's gravitational field, thus transforming all matter on earth to strange matter. Will get verification and modify as necessary. Also, I do not believe scientists at CERN actually deny the possibility, but rather the chances are so monumentally low (I have heard on the order of 1x10^-12%) that it is essentially more likely that the Earth will be destroyed in other ways. I will research this a bit and modify the article with proper citations. Cheers --AndrasK 18:32, 9 September 2008 (EDT)

It was just a start. I know of the "strange matter" issue but I also know the major concern was the mini black holes being formed. ClarkeD 18:34, 9 September 2008 (EDT)
To be clear, there is no concern in the scientific community. If there was they wouldn't have built the LHC (or any other supercollider) in the first place. As for the microscopic black holes, even if despite the infinitesimal odds one did form, it would die out nearly instantly due to Hawking radiation. It wouldn't have a large enough mass to sustain itself. You'd need something massive (a star) in order to create a self-sustaining black hole. There is nothing to be worried about. --Rspeed 00:33, 12 September 2008 (EDT)