Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

London: If critics are to be believed, the end of the universe will begin coming Wednesday when a Welsh miner’s son launches the world’s biggest scientific experiment to know how the universe was born.

The well-known Welshman physicist, Lyn Evans, dubbed Evans the Atom, will this week switch on a giant particle accelerator designed to unlock the secrets of the Big Bang.

On Wednesday, Evans will fire up the Large Hadron Collider, a 17-mile-long doughnut-shaped tunnel that will smash sub-atomic particles together at nearly the speed of light.

Built by the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN), the collider lies beneath the French-Swiss border, near the institution’s headquarters in Geneva, at depths ranging from 170 feet to 600 feet.
The aim of the 4.4 billion-pound (over $7.7 billion) experiment is to recreate the conditions that existed a fraction of a second after the Big Bang — the birth of the universe — and provide vital clues to the building blocks of life.

It will track the spray of particles thrown out by collisions in a search for the elusive Higgs Boson, a theoretical entity that supposedly lends weight, or mass, to the elementary particles. So important is this mysterious substance that it has been called the “God Particle”.Scientists also hope to shed some light on the invisible material that exists between particles - dubbed “dark matter” as no one knows what it really is - which make up most of the universe.
But a handful of scientists believe that the experiment could create a shower of unstable black holes that could “eat” the planet from within, and they are launching last-ditch efforts to halt it in the courts.

One of them, Otto Rossler, a retired German chemist, said he feared the experiment may create a devastating quasar - a mass of energy fuelled by black holes - inside the earth. Jets emanating from it would grow and catastrophes such as earthquakes and tsunamis would occur at the points they emerged from the earth.

“The weather will change completely, wiping out life, and very soon the whole planet will be eaten in a magnificent scenario - if you could watch it from the moon. A Biblical Armageddon. Even cloud and fire will form, as it says in the Bible.”

He said that attempts were still being made in the European Court of Human Rights to halt the experiment on the grounds that it violated the right to life. The court has, however, already rejected calls for a temporary delay in the project.

Walter Wagner, an American scientist who has been warning about the dangers of particle accelerators for 20 years, is awaiting a ruling on a lawsuit he filed a fortnight ago in his home state of Hawaii.

Evans, however, is dismissive of the “doom-mongers”.
“There are thousands of scientists around the world who have been preparing this machine and they know what they are talking about, unlike these guys,” he is quoted as saying in the British daily Daily Mail.

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will you be watching live your last day on the television screen? :smiley:

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

wow. sounds an awesome experiment. But I doubt if it would unlock any unknown secrets.

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

Heard about it on the radio 2 nights before. Should be interesting...

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

NPR Science Friday also had a program on it a couple of weeks ago.

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

Science is cool.

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

Yipee...can't wait for the beginning of the end of universe!

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

When we all die if that dooms day happens in this blessed month we will die in roza and hope to get to jannat faster.

This can be an awesome sci-fi movie flick. The particle accelerator starts a chain reaction and that starts to create a mini black hole the size of UK , some other scientist stop it at that and earth gets divided into two halves .

Which half would you like to be on ?

Better be on the right half then.

Jahan jyada soni soni kudiyan hongi!!

Microsoft style? (Hint: Bill Gates dies and is shown glimpse of heaven :cb: by what is his name at the gate)

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

Bada Bing Bada Boom!

It was a success.

                                                                                           By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS, Associated Press Writer                                                                 * 36 minutes ago*                             
                                                  
                        GENEVA - The world's largest particle collider passed its first major tests by firing two beams of protons in opposite directions around a 17-mile (27-kilometer) underground ring Wednesday in what scientists hope is the next great step to understanding the makeup of the universe. 

                    After a series of trial runs, two white dots flashed on a computer screen at 10:26 a.m. (0826 GMT) indicating that the protons had traveled clockwise along the full length of the 4 billion Swiss franc (US$3.8 billion) Large Hadron Collider — described as the biggest physics experiment in history.

“There it is,” project leader Lyn Evans said when the beam completed its lap.

Massive particle collider passes first key tests - Yahoo! News

Stage 1: Success

Stage 2: Yet to be seen :smiley:

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

No black holes = no apocalypse = no fun!

So disappointed.

You will have to wait for it for few months , the machine is in the testing phase still the real experiment which will create that black hole which will engulf us all will be conducted in few months from now.
The Associated Press: Largest particle collider conducts successful test

Re: Much awaited Doomed Wednesday: end of world on Big Bang test day

this is awesome this machine will unlock the secrets of the universe and will enable man to use the knowledge gained for the benefit of all, the implications will be staggering.

Hackers infiltrate Large Hadron Collider systems and mock IT security

Hackers have mounted an attack on the Large Hadron Collider, raising concerns about the security of the biggest experiment in the world. By Roger Highfield.

As the first particles were circulating in the machine near Geneva where the world wide web was born, a Greek group hacked into the facility, posting a warning about weaknesses in its infrastructure.

Calling themselves the Greek Security Team, the interlopers mocked the IT used on the project, describing the technicians responsible for security as "a bunch of schoolkids."

However, despite an ominous warning "don't mess with us," the hackers said they had no intention of disrupting the work of the atom smasher.

"We're pulling your pants down because we don't want to see you running around naked looking to hide yourselves when the panic comes," they wrote in Greek in a rambling note posted on the LHC's network.

The scientists behind the £4.4 billion "Big Bang" machine had already received threatening emails and been besieged by telephone calls from worried members of the public concerned by speculation that the machine could trigger a black hole to swallow the earth, or earthquakes and tsunamis, despite endless reassurances to the contrary from the likes of Prof Stephen Hawking.

The website - www.cmsmon.cern.ch - can no longer be accessed by the public as a result of the attack.

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Scientists working at Cern, the organisation that runs the vast smasher, were worried about what the hackers could do because they were "one step away" from the computer control system of one of the huge detectors of the machine, a vast magnet that weighs 12500 tons, measuring around 21 metres in length and 15 metres wide/high.

If they had hacked into a second computer network, they could have turned off parts of the vast detector and, said the insider, "it is hard enough to make these things work if no one is messing with it."

Fortunately, only one file was damaged but one of the scientists firing off emails as the CMS team fought off the hackers said it was a "scary experience".

The hackers targeted the Compact Muon Solenoid Experiment, or CMS, one of the four "eyes" of the facility that will be analysing the fallout of the Big Bang.

The CMS team of around 2000 scientists is racing with another team that runs the Atlas detector, also at Cern, to find the Higgs particle, one that is responsible for mass.

"There seems to be no harm done. From what they can tell, it was someone making the point that CMS was hackable," said James Gillies, spokesman for Cern. "It was quickly detected."

"We have several levels of network, a general access network and a much tighter network for sensitive things that operate the LHC," said Gillies.

"We are a very visible site," he said, adding that of the 1.4 million emails sent to Cern yesterday, 98 per cent was spam.

The hacking attempt started around the time that the giant machine was about to circulate its first particles, under the spotlight of the world's media.

Sorry folks, need to stop for at least a couple of months - a loose connection or something has brought the whole show to a grinding halt.
Need to warm up the collider from absolute zero to a temperature where the "electrician" can go in and check what's up, repair it and then about another month to cool it back down to zero before trying again.