Friday, October 8, 2010

Possible earth extinction on 11/9 due to LHC

....for the first time in History mankind has built a machine-weapon, able to destroy this planet. The LHC is an accelerator, a type of machine evolved during the cold war to rehearse small nuclear explosions, which could be used by the military as a sample of future Nuclear Bombs, and by researchers to explore the simplest forms of energy and particles that compose the Universe. After the cold war ended, Russia and America put an end to the astronomical costs of those machine-weapons, but Europe, with the new ‘marketing’ of ‘peaceful use’ (similar to our ‘peace forces’ in ‘humanitarian missions’ in Afghanistan) took the industry of accelerators a step further. The result is the Large Hadron Collider, a 7 teravolt, superconductive, superfluid ‘quark cannon’. which will mass together the densest, most attractive substance of the Universe, quarks, to explore the formation of quark-gluon liquids, the explosives, responsible of cosmic annihilations, such as Novas, Super-novas and perhaps the hypothetical big-bang of the Universe.

The irresponsibility of CERN’s physicists who plan to do those experiments with quark liquid explosives here on Earth, without even the slightest military or political supervision, has been denounced in Courts and Internet blogs, to not avail, since the LHC is a machine ‘too big to fail’, defended by technocrats, nuclear industries/ physicists and the corporate press, with the same zeal they defended nuclear weapons during the cold war, when that name was still ‘politically correct’. Now we have proofs that the European Company of Nuclear Research has been lying to the public about the probabilities of those catastrophic scenarios. In those internal documents CERN affirms that the LHC has enough potency to create strangelets, a strange liquid explosive that is responsible of the ice-9 reaction that converts stars into Super-novas. The Company has even a machine, CASTOR, for Centauro and STrangelet detecTOR, built to study them. Since the ‘Castor Team’ affirms the LHC will ‘likely’ create stable strangelets this 11/9. ...

via 1st extinction event: Leaked CERN documents state LHC has 70% chances to produce strangelets on 11/9.

Strangelets are theorized cosmological objects composed of an exotic form of matter known as strange matter or quark matter. This form of matter is created in the cores of particularly massively neutron stars. In neutron stars, the remnants of collapsed stars with masses between 4 and 8 times that of our sun, pressure and temperature is so intense that the protons and electrons in atomic nuclei fuse to become neutrons. The resultant matter is sometimes referred to as neutronium, a sea of neutrons packed far more densely than conventional matter.

via wisegeek

If the strange matter hypothesis is correct and a strangelet comes in contact with a lump of ordinary matter such as Earth, it could convert the ordinary matter to strange matter....  This "ice-nine" disaster scenario is as follows: one strangelet hits a nucleus, catalyzing its immediate conversion to strange matter. This liberates energy, producing a larger, more stable strangelet, which in turn hits another nucleus, catalyzing its conversion to strange matter. In the end, all the nuclei of all the atoms of Earth are converted, and Earth is reduced to a hot, large lump of strange matter.


via bbsradio



When scientists exploded the first atom bomb, they weren't entirely certain that the chain reaction would stop. There was a chance that it would consume the earth. They did it anyway.  This time, the curious ape may find a bullet in the chamber.


The LHC  is reassuring:




... According to most theoretical work, strangelets should change to ordinary matter within a thousand-millionth of a second. But could strangelets coalesce with ordinary matter and change it to strange matter? This question was first raised before the start up of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, RHIC, in 2000 in the United States. A study at the time showed that there was no cause for concern, and RHIC has now run for eight years, searching for strangelets without detecting any. At times, the LHC will run with beams of heavy nuclei, just as RHIC does. The LHC’s beams will have more energy than RHIC, but this makes it even less likely that strangelets could form.  It is difficult for strange matter to stick together in the high temperatures produced by such colliders, rather as ice does not form in hot water. In addition, quarks will be more dilute at the LHC than at RHIC, making it more difficult to assemble strange matter.  ... cern.ch



If you aren't reassured, then do what you came here to do. Say what you have to say. Eat. Drink. For tomorrow we fry. LHC, if it does produce strangelets that create a chain reaction, will stand for "Let Hell Come".


Don't worry, I'm thinking those UFOs that appear to disable our nukes will show up to disable to LHC if there is any real danger.


 


 


 

4 comments:

Cheng said...

Spookily 11/9 at Cern is 9/11 in euro speak. This story almost has a Nostradamian quality and is as laughable.
This is the date the universe decides (after billions of failed, natural, higher energy collisions) to create strangelets and strange matter.
The writer of the article needs to get out more and join the alternative LHC! - Lonely Hearts Club.

pyrodin said...

Oh great! Don't worry the Aliens will save us from ourselves.......

Peace

arjay001 said...

No, they are here to study our big boo boo. Is this the first time they have been able to witness an event like this, finally answering the age old question: Why and how do intelligent beings destroy their home planet and perhaps their entire solar system within two to three hundred years of developing radio communication? It may be a very interesting study, so why would they want to stop it?

Great Fun and we get to see it!!

RJ

Sam said...

Arjay, I've got a feeling that beings that can either travel faster than light or fold space-time have very little to glean from anything we do here. With distance/time no longer a boundary, they've seen just about everything by now.

Of course, every now and then, even WE like to go to the zoo and watch the monkeys throw poo at each other...