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-   -   WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (http://forum.vcoderz.com/showthread.php?t=13454)

ramyk 09-09-2008 06:44 PM

WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Re-creating the bing bang:

GENEVA - Deep beneath the Swiss-French border near Geneva, thousands of physicists are building the world's largest and most expensive science experiment — a particle collider that they hope will bring them one step closer toward unlocking some of the universe’s oldest secrets.
Meet the Large Hadron Collider.
It is a $4 billion instrument that scientists at the European Center of Nuclear Research, or CERN, hope to use to re-create the big bang — believed to be the event that caused the beginning of the universe — by crashing protons together at high speed.


Housed in a 17-mile (27-kilometer) circular tunnel several hundred feet beneath Switzerland and France, the LHC will operate at 456 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (-271 degrees Celsius), and collisions will occur 800 million times a second, the center says.
This week, scientists and workers lowered a magnet weighing 2,110 English tons — a weight equivalent to five jumbo jets — 328 feet (100 meters) below ground.
When they finally flip the switch on the LHC in November, the magnet and several others will help to drive two streams of protons in opposite directions around the ring at close to the speed of light.
Upon collision, the beams are expected to create many new particles and possibly a reconstruction of the universe in its very first moments.
“It’s detective work to sift through all [the destroyed remains],” says Francois Grey at CERN’s Information Department.
But if the experiment is successful, all that work could explain the origins of mass.

Joker666 09-09-2008 07:05 PM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Very interesting....

M|ch 09-09-2008 09:00 PM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
good hek hek we gonna die at the end whether now or in 60 years who cares.

Tawa 09-09-2008 09:55 PM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
This Is Not New ): I Remember Reading Something About It Long Time Ago, And I Think It Was Posted In Here.

sciencedoor 09-09-2008 10:55 PM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
who cares how the universe began? i dont care even they help, for what?
4 billions $, why for what
and as for final WE all gonna die tomorrow
i posted before about this subject
and the report said that 2012 will be the zero hour
who will judge them???????????????????????????

Gilgamesh 09-10-2008 01:06 AM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Maybe we can create a little world where we are the gods and the little creatures worship us :p

Jess 09-10-2008 11:11 AM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
تشغيل اكبر نظام لتسريع الجزيئات في العالم لكشف اسرار نشوء الكون

تم تشغيل اكبر نظام لتسريع الجزيئات في العالم اليوم قرب جنيف بهدف كشف اسرار المادة والكون. وتم ضخ حزمة اولى من البروتونات بعيد الساعة 7ونصف بتوقيت غرينتش في "نظام تصادم الجزيئات" وهو طوق يبلغ محيطه 27 كيلومترا على عمق مئة متر تحت الارض على جانبي الحدود الفرنسية السويسرية.

واعلن مدير المشروع لين ايفانز "بعد ضخ الحزمة كان علينا ان ننتظر خمس ثوان للحصول على المعطيات". ويفترض ان يسمح تصادم الجزيئات داخل النظام بكشف جزيئات اضافية لم ترصد حتى الآن من بينها ذرة "هيغز" الحلقة المفقودة في نموذج الجزيئات الثانوية التي تتألف منها المادة

elnashra

TAREK® 09-10-2008 11:17 AM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
ok its tomorrow and I am still alive shu sar ma3ak ya ramyk? :p

Neoxter 09-10-2008 11:18 AM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
i didnt get the part : we are all going to DIE tomorrow ?why ?

abousoun 09-10-2008 01:15 PM

Re: WE all gonna die tomorrow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
GENEVA - The world's largest particle collider successfully completed its first major test by firing a beam of protons around a 17-mile 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 10:36 a.m. indicating that the protons had traveled the full length of the $3.8 billion Large Hadron Collider.

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

Champagne corks popped in labs as far away as Chicago, where contributing scientists watched the proceedings by satellite. Physicists around the world now have much greater power than ever before to smash the components of atoms together in attempts to see how they are made.

"Well done everybody," said Robert Aymar, director-general of the European Organization for Nuclear Research, to cheers from the assembled scientists in the collider's control room at the Swiss-French border.

The organization, known by its French acronym CERN, began firing the protons — a type of subatomic particle — around the tunnel in stages less than an hour earlier.

Now that the beam has been successfully tested in clockwise direction, CERN plans to send it counterclockwise. Eventually two beams will be fired in opposite directions with the aim of recreating conditions a split second after the big bang, which scientists theorize was the massive explosion that created the universe.

The start of the collider — described as the biggest physics experiment in history — comes over the objections of some skeptics who fear the collision of protons could eventually imperil the earth.

The skeptics theorized that a byproduct of the collisions could be micro black holes, subatomic versions of collapsed stars whose gravity is so strong they can suck in planets and other stars.

"It's nonsense," said James Gillies, chief spokesman for CERN, before Wednesday's start.

CERN is backed by leading scientists like Britain's Stephen Hawking in dismissing the fears and declaring the experiments to be absolutely safe.
Gillies told the AP that the most dangerous thing that could happen would be if a beam at full power were to go out of control, and that would only damage the accelerator itself and burrow into the rock around the tunnel.

Nothing of the sort occurred Wednesday, though accelerator is still probably a year away from full power.

"On Wednesday we start small," said Gillies. "A really good result would be to have the other beam going around, too, because once you've got a beam around once in both directions you know that there is no show-stopper."

The project organized by the 20 European member nations of CERN has attracted researchers from 80 nations. Some 1,200 are from the United States, an observer country which contributed US$531 million. Japan, another observer, also is a major contributor.

The collider is designed to push the proton beam close to the speed of light, whizzing 11,000 times a second around the tunnel.

Smaller colliders have been used for decades to study the makeup of the atom. Less than 100 years ago scientists thought protons and neutrons were the smallest components of an atom's nucleus, but in stages since then experiments have shown they were made of still smaller quarks and gluons and that there were other forces and particles.

The CERN experiments could reveal more about "dark matter," antimatter and possibly hidden dimensions of space and time. It could also find evidence of the hypothetical particle — the Higgs boson — believed to give mass to all other particles, and thus to matter that makes up the universe.

Some scientists have been waiting for 20 years to use the LHC.

Thank You ...


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