Hadron Collider
Saturday, August 9, 2008 1:38:26 PM
I read this with interest, not because I am a very religious person but from a view of the scientific point and my own personal perception, though a novice in such scientific matters I be.
'The main purpose of the Large Hadron Collider, is to produce anti-matter and black holes and conditions just after the Big Bang.
However there are those would theorise that these black holes that are created and which contain the densest matter in the universe, will plummet to the very core of the earth. Then, slowly but surely they will grow, one particle at a time but at an ever accelerating rate.
Scientists have estimated that a stable black hole at the centre of the earth would consume not only France, but the whole planet in the very short time span of between 4 minutes and 30 seconds and 7 minutes.'
This brings chills to my spine. Maybe it's scare mongering, but this machine has already been created and has been switched on Saturday (today).
Bare with me as I try to put into words my concerns.
'The machine has been called the largest scientific experiment in history and it straddles the French and Swiss border buried at a depth of 330 feet underground.
It cost $5.8 billion to set up and with it scientists will hunt for signs of invisible "dark matter" and "dark energy"
The most powerful atom-smasher ever built could make some strange discoveries, such as invisible matter or extra dimensions in space, after it is switched on this Saturday.'
Personally speaking this is the first I have heard of such a machine. What on earth do they think will happen when this machine gets out of hand? Scientists - in my opinion - see themselves as some sort of gods within their own right. Yes, they make discoveries and inventions that better the world but also there are those projects that have done nothing to better the world too. Now remember, this is purely my own opinion on this project and maybe I am being a little too guarded about this 'progress'. But I personally think they are dabbling where they shouldn't. How many times in the world's history have 'scientists' created something, before they are ready to handle it properly, leading to accidents and such. I fear for mankind at times, it's like big kids in a candy shop wanting, wanting, wanting... dipping their hands in candy jars, grabbing handfuls of the goodies, and often making themselves sick in the process.
'Some critics fear that the Large Hadron Collider may actually exceed physicists' wildest calculations by creating a black hole that could swallow Earth, or spit out particles that could turn the planet into a hot dead mass, or release theoretical killer particles known as strangelets.'
For every scientific invention there is a side effect. Such as mobile phones (which I cannot do without now lol). But apparently mobile phones can be bad for your health. Now, think about it, this Hadron Collider is a huge invention, a very drastic one, what if the critics are right? The earth will never be the same again. Not to mention if it gets into the wrong hands (for surely this thing will be regulated and monitored by computer(s).)
'The collider basically consists of a ring of supercooled magnets 17 miles in circumference attached to huge barrel-shaped detectors.
When it is at full power, two beams of protons will race around the huge ring 11,000 times a second in opposite directions. They will travel in two tubes and speed through a vacuum that is colder and emptier than outer space.
Large detectors and cameras will collect data as the protons collide and 15 petabytes of data will be collected each year equivalent to a pile of CDs 12miles tall.'
I also have my own personal theory. The earth has its own natural leylines, which are magnetic in their own right. This machine is a huge connected powerful magnet based creation, surely that is going to effect the earth's natural leylines?











