The primary reason I'm sending this along is that it recreates that "I
just sprained my brain" feeling one gets from reading about Quantum
Physics. That, and the fact it put me in mind of _The Anubis Gates_.

Udhay

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/13/science/space/13lhc.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

Essay
The Collider, the Particle and a Theory About Fate
By DENNIS OVERBYE
Published: October 12, 2009

More than a year after an explosion of sparks, soot and frigid helium
shut it down, the world’s biggest and most expensive physics experiment,
known as the Large Hadron Collider, is poised to start up again. In
December, if all goes well, protons will start smashing together in an
underground racetrack outside Geneva in a search for forces and
particles that reigned during the first trillionth of a second of the
Big Bang.

Then it will be time to test one of the most bizarre and revolutionary
theories in science. I’m not talking about extra dimensions of
space-time, dark matter or even black holes that eat the Earth. No, I’m
talking about the notion that the troubled collider is being sabotaged
by its own future. A pair of otherwise distinguished physicists have
suggested that the hypothesized Higgs boson, which physicists hope to
produce with the collider, might be so abhorrent to nature that its
creation would ripple backward through time and stop the collider before
it could make one, like a time traveler who goes back in time to kill
his grandfather.

Holger Bech Nielsen, of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, and
Masao Ninomiya of the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics in Kyoto,
Japan, put this idea forward in a series of papers with titles like
“Test of Effect From Future in Large Hadron Collider: a Proposal” and
“Search for Future Influence From LHC,” posted on the physics Web site
arXiv.org in the last year and a half.

According to the so-called Standard Model that rules almost all physics,
the Higgs is responsible for imbuing other elementary particles with mass.

“It must be our prediction that all Higgs producing machines shall have
bad luck,” Dr. Nielsen said in an e-mail message. In an unpublished
essay, Dr. Nielson said of the theory, “Well, one could even almost say
that we have a model for God.” It is their guess, he went on, “that He
rather hates Higgs particles, and attempts to avoid them.”

This malign influence from the future, they argue, could explain why the
United States Superconducting Supercollider, also designed to find the
Higgs, was canceled in 1993 after billions of dollars had already been
spent, an event so unlikely that Dr. Nielsen calls it an “anti-miracle.”

You might think that the appearance of this theory is further proof that
people have had ample time — perhaps too much time — to think about what
will come out of the collider, which has been 15 years and $9 billion in
the making.

The collider was built by CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear
Research, to accelerate protons to energies of seven trillion electron
volts around an 18-mile underground racetrack and then crash them
together into primordial fireballs.

For the record, as of the middle of September, CERN engineers hope to
begin to collide protons at the so-called injection energy of 450
billion electron volts in December and then ramp up the energy until the
protons have 3.5 trillion electron volts of energy apiece and then,
after a short Christmas break, real physics can begin.

Maybe.

Dr. Nielsen and Dr. Ninomiya started laying out their case for doom in
the spring of 2008. It was later that fall, of course, after the CERN
collider was turned on, that a connection between two magnets vaporized,
shutting down the collider for more than a year.

Dr. Nielsen called that “a funny thing that could make us to believe in
the theory of ours.”

He agreed that skepticism would be in order. After all, most big science
projects, including the Hubble Space Telescope, have gone through a
period of seeming jinxed. At CERN, the beat goes on: Last weekend the
French police arrested a particle physicist who works on one of the
collider experiments, on suspicion of conspiracy with a North African
wing of Al Qaeda.

Dr. Nielsen and Dr. Ninomiya have proposed a kind of test: that CERN
engage in a game of chance, a “card-drawing” exercise using perhaps a
random-number generator, in order to discern bad luck from the future.
If the outcome was sufficiently unlikely, say drawing the one spade in a
deck with 100 million hearts, the machine would either not run at all,
or only at low energies unlikely to find the Higgs.

Sure, it’s crazy, and CERN should not and is not about to mortgage its
investment to a coin toss. The theory was greeted on some blogs with
comparisons to Harry Potter. But craziness has a fine history in a
physics that talks routinely about cats being dead and alive at the same
time and about anti-gravity puffing out the universe.

As Niels Bohr, Dr. Nielsen’s late countryman and one of the founders of
quantum theory, once told a colleague: “We are all agreed that your
theory is crazy. The question that divides us is whether it is crazy
enough to have a chance of being correct.”

Dr. Nielsen is well-qualified in this tradition. He is known in physics
as one of the founders of string theory and a deep and original thinker,
“one of those extremely smart people that is willing to chase crazy
ideas pretty far,” in the words of Sean Carroll, a Caltech physicist and
author of a coming book about time, “From Eternity to Here.”

Another of Dr. Nielsen’s projects is an effort to show how the universe
as we know it, with all its apparent regularity, could arise from pure
randomness, a subject he calls “random dynamics.”

Dr. Nielsen admits that he and Dr. Ninomiya’s new theory smacks of time
travel, a longtime interest, which has become a respectable research
subject in recent years. While it is a paradox to go back in time and
kill your grandfather, physicists agree there is no paradox if you go
back in time and save him from being hit by a bus. In the case of the
Higgs and the collider, it is as if something is going back in time to
keep the universe from being hit by a bus. Although just why the Higgs
would be a catastrophe is not clear. If we knew, presumably, we wouldn’t
be trying to make one.

We always assume that the past influences the future. But that is not
necessarily true in the physics of Newton or Einstein. According to
physicists, all you really need to know, mathematically, to describe
what happens to an apple or the 100 billion galaxies of the universe
over all time are the laws that describe how things change and a
statement of where things start. The latter are the so-called boundary
conditions — the apple five feet over your head, or the Big Bang.

The equations work just as well, Dr. Nielsen and others point out, if
the boundary conditions specify a condition in the future (the apple on
your head) instead of in the past, as long as the fundamental laws of
physics are reversible, which most physicists believe they are.

“For those of us who believe in physics,” Einstein once wrote to a
friend, “this separation between past, present and future is only an
illusion.”

In Kurt Vonnegut’s novel “Sirens of Titan,” all of human history turns
out to be reduced to delivering a piece of metal roughly the size and
shape of a beer-can opener to an alien marooned on Saturn’s moon so he
can repair his spaceship and go home.

Whether the collider has such a noble or humble fate — or any fate at
all — remains to be seen. As a Red Sox fan my entire adult life, I feel
I know something about jinxes.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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