Reply #1 Top

Oh, I though you were leaving. 8(|

Reply #2 Top

Although it was designed to answer the fundamental questions of life, some people have claimed that it could end up destroying the entire cosmos.
End of quote

 

Retards.  Some people have nothing better to do than find something to complain about.

Reply #3 Top

Dang, no edit button! XO

It amazes me that for all the new technology and the advances in aciences and society in general that there will always be a small group still wearing the animal fur standing around the fire pointing and maing wierd sounds.

We can't provide health care, we can't feed everyone or provide shelter and safety but we can tax people and use valuable time to figure out the "big bang theroy" when all you have to do is watch the TV program. :-"

Reply #4 Top

 

I didn't even read past the second sentence, but...this'd make a nice wallpaper... ;)

Reply #6 Top

Quoting Pixeleo, reply 4
 
I didn't even read past the second sentence, but...this'd make a nice wallpaper...
End of Pixeleo's quote

Absolutely right!

So is there really a chance that the scientists have made a terrible miscalculation and that their new toy could inadvertently kill us all?

Well, all I can hope for is that they didn't screw up the decimal points!

As for the rest?

Some people have nothing better to do than find something to complain about.
End of quote

Too right! Now, gimme dem fish!

And if they goofed with those decimal points:

Reply #7 Top

Despite the low probability of something that drastic happening as a result of a mishap,there is always the very real possibility when the reason you are performing such an experiment is that you dont KNOW what will happen...thats why they are doing it. ^_^

Someday experiments like this will be carried out in space or on the moon where Earth would be in no danger.Even if a blackhole was formed and swallowed up the moon,we would still have tides and the earths orbit,tilt and spin would be unaffected...we would just have a blackhole of equal mass to the moon orbiting the Earth. :fuzzy:

No more moonlit nights tho. ;P

Reply #8 Top

50/50 chance.

Either we do, or we don't ;)

Reply #9 Top

Quoting Philly0381, reply 1
Oh, I though you were leaving.
End of Philly0381's quote

OK - that was funny!!! :w00t:

Reply #10 Top

so this thing gets turned on next wednesday, I'm surprised I haven't heard anything about it on cnn, considering it is the largest & most expensive man-made machine ever built in history. 

Simulating the big bang sounds interesting, I guess the big bang theory is no longer a theory.  Hope they use ear protection, probably a little loud during the big bang part of the simulation... LOL! X|

Reply #11 Top

Despite the low probability of something that drastic happening as a result of a mishap,there is always the very real possibility when the reason you are performing such an experiment is that you dont KNOW what will happen...thats why they are doing it. Someday experiments like this will be carried out in space or on the moon where Earth would be in no danger.Even if a blackhole was formed and swallowed up the moon,we would still have tides and the earths orbit,tilt and spin would be unaffected...we would just have a blackhole of equal mass to the moon orbiting the Earth. No more moonlit nights tho.
End of quote

Just a blackhole of equal mass to the moon... JUST?!  Wouldn't that have some negative effects?

Reply #12 Top

A very interesting read, thanks NT!

Reply #13 Top

Just a blackhole of equal mass to the moon... JUST?! Wouldn't that have some negative effects?
End of quote

No...things would just go on as always...just really dark nights. 8O The blackhole would replace the moons mass and continue to orbit in its place.

Now if the moon were to just disappear or be ripped out of orbit suddenly(not having a replacement mass to retain our systems balance)...things could get ugly. :omg:

Reply #14 Top

things could get ugly.
End of quote

They already are.

Reply #15 Top

 

No...things would just go on as always...just really dark nights. The blackhole would replace the moons mass and continue to orbit in its place.
Now if the moon were to just disappear or be ripped out of orbit suddenly(not having a replacement mass to retain our systems balance)...things could get ugly.
End of quote

 

You nerd!  XD

Reply #16 Top

Bizarrely, this group, led by a German chemist called Otto Rossler, are using the European Convention on human rights to argue that, should the LHC destroy the entire Universe, it would 'violate the right to life and right to private family life'.
End of quote

 

Uhm.... not like there'd be anyone to complain about it.  XD

 

but...this'd make a nice wallpaper...
End of quote

 

That would make an awesome dream.

 

Despite the low probability of something that drastic happening as a result of a mishap,there is always the very real possibility when the reason you are performing such an experiment is that you dont KNOW what will happen...thats why they are doing it.
End of quote

No no no. Don't you realize when it comes to things like this there is always someone around who knows EVERYTHING. ;P

Reply #17 Top

Oh hell there's nothing to worry about....Just do what they used to teach us in school a long time ago.....get a wooden desk...crawl underneath and put your head between your legs and you'll be fine...Oh...and dont forget to duct tape and plastic sheet your house first! :thumbsup:  

Reply #18 Top

Just do what they used to teach us in school a long time ago
End of quote

Don't you mean a long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long,long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, time ago?

Reply #19 Top

Actually I think you missed a few longs! XD

Reply #20 Top

No...things would just go on as always...just really dark nights. The blackhole would replace the moons mass and continue to orbit in its place.Now if the moon were to just disappear or be ripped out of orbit suddenly(not having a replacement mass to retain our systems balance)...things could get ugly.

[nerd]Actually, that is not true. Were that black hole large enough to remain in existence and "eat" the Moon, it would also make short work of Earth. You have to consider the gravitational force required to collapse the Moon into an immeasurably small volume, not just the mass of the Moon.

Scientists do have some idea about what will happen. The black hole will "evaporate" due to Hawking radiation or something like that. What they don't know is what they will see before that happens.[/nerd]

Reply #21 Top

[nerd]Actually, that is not true. Were that black hole large enough to remain in existence and "eat" the Moon, it would also make short work of Earth. You have to consider the gravitational force required to collapse the Moon into an immeasurably small volume, not just the mass of the Moon.
Scientists do have some idea about what will happen. The black hole will "evaporate" due to Hawking radiation or something like that. What they don't know is what they will see before that happens.[/nerd]
End of quote

 

XD  Love the nerd quotes. XD

Reply #22 Top

Quoting Pixeleo, reply 4
 I didn't even read past the second sentence, but...this'd make a nice wallpaper...
End of Pixeleo's quote

Funny.........I was thinking exactly the same thing...........must be 'Leo telepathy' |-)

Reply #23 Top

Actually, they'll find the LHC is an epic waste of money. 

Reply #24 Top

but...this'd make a nice wallpaper...
End of quote

 

Yes, if you had a very small, widescreen monitor. :P

 

 

Reply #25 Top

Actually, that is not true. Were that black hole large enough to remain in existence and "eat" the Moon, it would also make short work of Earth. You have to consider the gravitational force required to collapse the Moon into an immeasurably small volume, not just the mass of the Moon.
Scientists do have some idea about what will happen. The black hole will "evaporate" due to Hawking radiation or something like that. What they don't know is what they will see before that happens
End of quote

This is true...I was oversimplifying Newtonian physics for the benefit of those of us educated in the American educational system...hehehe. :dur:

What I should have done was put a whole lot of 'IFs' in there.In the spirit of the article...IF scientist somehow created a small STABLE blackhole(artificial and 'tuned' somehow) and it managed to gobble up the moon...its effect on the Earth would probably be negligable...so long as it inherited the moons rotation.(so those nasty spumes of radiation at the poles wouldnt be pointed at the Earth)(after a while that might build up to a dangerous level along the Earths path) 8O

Its event horizon would be too small to gobble up the Earth(a blackhole of the moons mass would be teeny tiny)and it would get any closer for the same reason the moon dosnt fall into the Earth now...they are essentially orbiting around each other at a point in space(somewhere near the Earth)fast enough that they simultaneously are pulling at each other and attempting to fly apart...its balanced.(tho I suspect all orbits are decaying orbits due to entropy and the slow acretion of mass over eons...eventually attraction would overcome velocity) :\  

 

I think I read somewhere that even something as massive as our sun wasnt even large enough to form a neutron star.(if it could it would end up about 10 miles in diameter I think)So I dont know what the minimum mass is for a blackhole is...not sure if the entire mass of the solar system would be enough...I doubt it would be. (\B):vulcan:(\B)   

 

Heres something I never quite understood about blackhole theory...they form an acretion disc just outside the event horizon...made up presumably of things that where moving too quickly(or too far away) to get sucked in so the settle into an orbit around the hole.Anything crossing the event horizon is doomed,even light.Yet they always show those jets of radiation spewing out from the poles...I can only guess that it is accumulated energy drawn in by the hole but never crossing the event horizon.Possibly built up to impossible levels and self 'ignited' before it can be drawn in all the way. o_O

 

However it happens...it would make for one hell of a pseudo-science,star trek technobabble doomsday weapon. 8O :w00t: