The world will end in May.
That's when the LHC at CERN goes live. It is 16.5 miles of pure blasphemy curving back on itself, built to speed the most basic building blocks of creation to unholy speeds and crash them into each other to see how they hurt each other.
Its heretical search for the "God particle" will surely result in the wrath of the divine.
This is the new Tower of Babel, so godless that it had to be located in both France and Switzerland.
This one guy told me that this thing has a .000001% chance of killing us all.
But do the scientists care?
No
They only care about their gay marriage and their nationalized health care.
But look what happens when they make their precious "strangelet":
How will this affront to God kill us all?
When is the exact date and time this heresy will being operating [for count-down purposes]
WHAT WILL HATH SCIENCE WROUGHT?
Conclude your affairs
Moderator: Seriously
Re: Conclude your affairs
I ain't afraid of no big bad boson.
Giant rocks hitting the planet at 38,000 mph never bodes well.
Giant rocks hitting the planet at 38,000 mph never bodes well.
Re: Conclude your affairs
Bah. This is just another gimmick to sell more Coca Cola.
Re: Conclude your affairs
Scientist reckon that the reason why we dont hear radio signals from intelligent life is because they reach the level of nuclear technology and anhilliate themselves through war. Its a bit nieve to assume that alien intelligent are anywhere near as war like as ourselves and its stupid to stamp human social issues on to anything else non-human let alone non-earth-based. The real reason why we dont get any ultra intelligent beings visiting is because the try to work out the nature of the universe - build themselves a super-collider and create a mini-blackhole that eats their planet in one foul swoop.
Did I read somewhere that they used a smaller super collider and created a mini-blackhole that survived for a couple of millliseconds before evaporating? What happens if they create one using this collider and it lasts long enough to consume the odd air molecule which will then increase its gravity pull and stop it evaporating and thus has the knock on effect of pulling everything else in.
Keep an eye on the european websites - if they all start going offline one by one hold on to america guys - its gonna be a bumpy ride!
Did I read somewhere that they used a smaller super collider and created a mini-blackhole that survived for a couple of millliseconds before evaporating? What happens if they create one using this collider and it lasts long enough to consume the odd air molecule which will then increase its gravity pull and stop it evaporating and thus has the knock on effect of pulling everything else in.
Keep an eye on the european websites - if they all start going offline one by one hold on to america guys - its gonna be a bumpy ride!
Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning.
Re: Conclude your affairs
They also created anti-matter at CRNE. There was fear that would end all as we know it too. I'm too dumb to know if these fears are rational or irrational in principle.
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Re: Conclude your affairs
IN the event of a strangelet-induced apocalypse, there would not be big 'splosions and storms, of course I figure that was for theatrical effect. The earth would just slowly be consumed by an ever-growing mass, like a sub-subatomic cancer. No big deal.
However, Strangelets are still in the realm of hypothetical existence. I don't know whether the fact that it might not even exist is factored in the .000001%.
The problem with the hypothesis is that a strangelet is theorized to be more stable than conventional atoms and matter, so it would make sense for it to be more common. Neutron stars should be full of the stuff. But they're not.
(Here's a side note, but for some reason I imagine it in my mind as having the appearance of graphite-colored oatmeal. I don't know why.)
It happens naturally in space for no real reason at all. Of course there's a lot of things that happen it space that we don't necessarily want occurring on Earth.
However, Strangelets are still in the realm of hypothetical existence. I don't know whether the fact that it might not even exist is factored in the .000001%.
The problem with the hypothesis is that a strangelet is theorized to be more stable than conventional atoms and matter, so it would make sense for it to be more common. Neutron stars should be full of the stuff. But they're not.
(Here's a side note, but for some reason I imagine it in my mind as having the appearance of graphite-colored oatmeal. I don't know why.)
Antimatter is produced quite often in particle accelerators, but from what I've heard is it's always produced with it's pair, which quickly annihilates each other. The production of it is a couple nanograms per year.smash wrote:They also created anti-matter at CRNE. There was fear that would end all as we know it too. I'm too dumb to know if these fears are rational or irrational in principle.
It happens naturally in space for no real reason at all. Of course there's a lot of things that happen it space that we don't necessarily want occurring on Earth.
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