Saturday, July 19, 2008

Giant Hadron Collider


Will The New Hadron Collider Create Black Hole?
Twenty member states contribute to The European Organization for Nuclear Research, known by its French acronym, CERN, a vast laboratory located 100 meters (328 feet) beneath the surface of the French-Swiss border. The structure in this photo is used for exhibitions and other events.

The new Franco-Swiss supercollider could fill gaps in scientific knowledge or create a black hole

Are there other worlds, extra dimensions we have not yet discovered occupying space right alongside ours? One bleak outcome of the Giant Hadron Collider is discovery of a black hole, but it is unlikely. Scientists say they evaporate almost as fast as they come forth.

The LHC may take us back to the beginning of the worlds. If you go back to those early times all there is are a few structures, something very simple, and then we can see how it all evolved into the complex system we have today. Perhaps, then we can see what is the theory of life--if, indeed, there is one theory of life and of everything.

A theory of everything? The Large Hadron Collider may take us to that point. It is absolutely key to understanding our origin. Scientists may be on the verge of solveing it, unraveling the mystery of life.

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