Jumping Into the Unknown

    Stevie Smith (The Tech Herald.com
wrote -2009-):

    Could LHC black holes still carry an Earthly threat?

    New claims concerning the controversial Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
    particle accelerator have this week suggested that microscopic black
    holes created by the gigantic atom-smashing machine could, contrary to
    official safety reports, will not vanish quite as quickly as they
    form.

    Moreover, a group of physicists have scrutinised the mathematic
    processes involved in operating the 27-kilometre ringed accelerator
    and determined that any resulting black holes will not simply
    disappear from existence a mere millisecond after being created, which
    is the line LHC scientists are holding to.

    According to Roberto Casadio of the University of Bologna in Italy and
    Sergio Fabi and Benjamin Harms of the University of Alabama in the
    United States, miniscule black holes spawned by the collider could
    exist for up to a second or longer.

    The physicists believe this length of time, an eternity when it comes
    to particle physics, could then potentially allow the black holes to
    struggle for growth increase as opposed to merely decaying in an
    instant a struggle the teams theoretical model shows they ultimately
    would not win.

    While Casadio, Fabi and Harms concede that planet-threatening growth
    is highly unlikely, with any created black holes passing harmlessly
    beyond the atmosphere before disappearing completely, they have
    offered that current safety claims are inaccurate.

    We conclude that the growth of black holes to catastrophic size does
    not seem possible, they outlined through a paper posted to scientific
    discussion forum ArXiv.org. Nonetheless, it remains true that the
    expected decay times are much longer than is typically predicted by
    other models.

    The European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN) team behind the LHC
    particle accelerator, which is buried deep under the Swiss/French
    border, is hoping the mighty machine will enable them to re-create,
    study, and understand conditions in the universe at the very point of
    its creation.

    The Large Hadron Collider, the worlds largest particle accelerator,
    suffered a mechanical failure when it was officially fired up in the
    latter half of 2008. Following a frustrating period of repair, CERN
    scientists are expected to resume smashing protons at velocities
    approaching the speed of light this coming spring.

    **** Remarks from SaneScienceOrg: ****
    ...
    Zealous, jealous, Nobel Prize hungry Physicists are racing each other
    and stopping at nothing to try to find the supposed 'Higgs Boson'(aka
    God) Particle, among others, and are risking nothing less than the
    annihilation of the Earth and all Life in endless experiments hoping
    to prove a theory when urgent tangible problems face the planet. The
    European Organization for Nuclear Research(CERN) Large Hadron
    Collider (LHC) is the world's most powerful atom smasher that will soon
    be firing groups of billions of heavy subatomic particles at each
    other at nearly the speed of light to create Miniature Big Bangs
    producing Micro Black Holes, Strangelets, AntiMatter and other
    potentially cataclysmic phenomena as described below.

    Particle physicists have run out of ideas and are at a dead end
    forcing them to take reckless chances with more and more powerful and
    costly machines to create new and never-seen-before, unstable and
    unknown matter while Astrophysicists, on the other hand, are advancing
    science and knowledge on a daily basis making new discoveries in these
    same areas by observing the universe, not experimenting with it and
    with your life. Einstein used Astronomy to prove his landmark general
    theory of relativity that, ironically, decribes, among other things,
    the Black Holes which the LHC is designed to produce at the hoped for
    rate of one per second.

    The LHC is a dangerous gamble as CERN physicist Alvaro De Rújula in
    the BBC LHC documentary, 'The Six Billion Dollar Experiment',
    incredibly admits quote, 'Will we find the Higgs particle at the LHC?
    That, of course, is the question. And the answer is, science is what
    we do when we don't know what we're doing.' And CERN spokesmodel Brian
    Cox follows with this stunning quote, 'the LHC is certainly, by far,
    the biggest jump into the unknown.'

    The CERN-LHC website Mainpage itself states: 'There are many theories
    as to what will result from these collisions,...' Again, this is
    because they truly don't know what's going to happen. They are
    experimenting with forces they don't understand to obtain results they
    can't comprehend. If you think like most people do that 'They must
    know what they're doing' you could not be more wrong. Some people
    think similarly about medical Dr.s but consider this by way of
    comparison and example from JAMA: 'A recent Institute of Medicine
    report quoted rates estimating that medical errors kill between 44,000
    and 98,000 people a year in US hospitals.' The second part of the CERN
    quote reads '...but what's for sure is that a brave new world of
    physics will emerge from the new accelerator,...' A molecularly
    changed or Black Hole consumed Lifeless World? The end of the quote
    reads '...as knowledge in particle physics goes on to describe the
    workings of the Universe.' These experiments to date have so far
    produced infinitely more questions than answers but there isn't a
    particle physicist alive who wouldn't gladly trade his life to glimpse
    the 'God particle', and sacrifice the rest of us with him. Reason and
    common sense will tell you that the risks far outweigh any
    potential(as CERN physicists themselves say) benefits.

    This quote from National Geographic, 'The hunt for the God particle',
    exactly sums this 'science' up: 'If all goes right, matter will be
    transformed by the violent collisions into wads of energy, which will
    in turn condense back into various intriguing types of particles, some
    of them never seen before. That's the essence of experimental particle
    physics: 'You smash stuff together and see what other stuff comes
    out.'

(END)

-- from - The Tech Herald.com

           http://www.thetechherald.com/article.php/200905/2869/Could-LHC-
           black-holes-still-carry-an-Earthly-threat

What do you suppose will happen?

The speed of light is exactly 299,792,458 meters per second. At LHC,
protons will smash into each other at 299,792,454.9 meters per second,
99.99999898% the speed of light, Assume all that energy produces black
holes. Suppose as protons smash into each other they produce millions of
black holes and they all MERGE.  Suppose also that Hawking evaporation,
which is just as THEORY is false. What do you suppose will happen next?

HR

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