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New Heavy Ion Collider could "destroy the earth"

Sith Lord Jesus writes "According to an article in the London Sunday Times, a new nuclear accelerator designed to recreate the Big Bang might possibly--*possibly*--cause the earth to "disappear in the twinkling of an eye." Oops. " This reminds me of the some the fears that the folks in the Manhatten Project had-almost zero chance of anything occuring, but the notion of creating a black hole on the surface of the Earth is a strangely appealing one, from a sheer comedic value POV.

413 comments

  1. Scientists were afraid in New Mexico in 1945 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scientists didn't know whether the first uncontrolled man made uranium chain reaction wouldn't spread and split more atoms than they thought. Let's hope "stranglets" don't multiply.

    1. Re:Scientists were afraid in New Mexico in 1945 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haven't you heard of conservation of hadron numbers, lepton numbers, charge, etc...? There's no way s\bar{s} quark pairs can spread like that.

    2. Re:Scientists were afraid in New Mexico in 1945 by GreyFauk · · Score: 1

      Everyone who knew your parents before you were
      born realized that if they had any kids they would
      grow up to be a nerotic toad like you.

      Umm... so they were right... maybe the naysayers
      about this project are wrong?
      I, for one, don't really care either way. The information
      they get out of completing the project will be interesting.
      Getting sucked up by a black hole or disappearing
      in a big bang would be interesting as well.
      I just hope it doesn't happen when I'm sleeping..
      or is so fast that I miss it... (that would suck)
      Heh :>

      --
      Friends don't let friends buy Compaq's. (Dell/Gateway... same same) You want a good computer? Build it yourself.
    3. Re:Scientists were afraid in New Mexico in 1945 by agtofchaos · · Score: 1

      Why do we even bother researching this kind of stuff when we know that there is a chance of it screwing up everything? They already know that stranglets can be dangerous, so why are the insisting on making them?

      --
      ---Got Coffee?---
    4. Re:Scientists were afraid in New Mexico in 1945 by Ion-Flux · · Score: 1

      because the world would be a very boring place if we only did what was safe.
      and because the pay off would be incredible.


      "Perfection is achieved only at the point of collapse"-

  2. Could you imagine Saddam Hussein with one of these by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scary!

  3. Let's go out with a (Big) Bang! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I once heard a report on Explorations. (http://www.wbaifree.org/explorations) that colliding subatomic particles could form a Perfect Vacume. This vacume would replace our universe's Pretty Good Vacume and erase our existence. Kinda sucks dosen't it?
    An unlikely scenario, but that doesn't stop people from picketing particle accelerators.

    1. Re:Let's go out with a (Big) Bang! by cdlu · · Score: 1

      Pickets can be dangerous - those pointy tips can penetrate the lab walls and set off a chain reaction well before it was intended. :)

  4. story .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there was a story about exactly this kind of thing (a 200TeV supercollider) in omni magazine a while back..(www.omnimag.com)..dont remember who wrote it..

  5. Re:NUCLEAR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No. they capitalise the first 2 words of the sotyry routinely. this just happenned to be A NUCLEAR. check the other stories.

  6. The Sunday Times is a tabloid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the same paper that published the
    "ethnic bullet" story.

    1. Re:The Sunday Times is a tabloid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ..and how Linux sucks..

    2. Re:The Sunday Times is a tabloid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      .and how Linux sucks..



      And so obviously the paper has no journalistic merits. Since its reporting doesn't agree with the prejudiced views of the clueless Slashdot weenies, it's obviously all bollocks.




      Now, as it happens, the Sunday Times is not my favourite newspaper, but it has to be pointed out that, although todays story on particle physics was a little alarmist, there's nothing wrong with that. In fact, most of what's in the paper is sound journalism.




      If Slashdot really is the future of news reporting, god help us. Welcome to... the peoples' republic of LINUX(tm)?

  7. Book about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few months ago I read a sci-fi fiction book on this very subject. They were creating an accelerator around Saturn that would try and duplicate the initial condition of the Big Bang, and a few scientists figured out it would most likely work very well and destroy if not the universe, then at the very least a major section of it.

    Too bad I can't remember what the book is called :( It's somewhere on one of my shelves, but I have a lot of books.

    1. Re:Book about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps our 'Big-Bang' was caused by some civilization that build a Heavy Ion super collider and fired it up and their big bang was caused... etc...

      Now I have one of those ice-cream brain freezes :)

    2. Re:Book about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think I read the same book. If I recall correctly it was Forever Peace. I didn't like it too much but it did have same interesting ideas, such as this very topic.

    3. Re:Book about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was Forever Peace, by Joe Haldeman. Good stuff, won the Hugo Award. If you liked Forever War, you'll like FPeace. Even though Forever War was way better.

    4. Re:Book about this by SEWilco · · Score: 2

      James P. Hogan's "Thrice Upon a Time" also involves an accident in extreme physics.

  8. Some things you just don't do..putting your hand i by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh great, NOW you tell me!

  9. Re:Igniting the Atmosphere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A cobalt bomb is a different thingy, although about 8 should be enough to get rid of humanity and some other stuff. Not by its expliosive power though.

    Minor side note, NASA is going to send a plutonium loaded probe that might reenter the atmosphere in August. If it does about 72lb of that stuff is going to come down on us ... farewell then.

    While some things might seem to be laughable there risks no-one ever asked me whether I'd like to take them and the more we are reaching the limit where "something" goes wrong can destroy a lot of the world, the more the irresponsibility of quite a bunch of people shows up.

    I dare say the scientists are the most sane though and physics is just cool 8)

  10. Um, okay. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I went to Cal Berkeley for a few years, and there was always the concern that some idiot (read: grad student) would come up with some nifty idea. I'd be sitting in class, thinking through the lecture, and *poof* I AM NO MORE. This is kinda frightening...like getting hit by a baseball bat in the back of the head. Just think, you could be minding your own business and then you just

  11. Other things could happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This could create random portals to other dimensions in random places in the Earth (or perhaps even create these dimensions!), kill 3/5 of the people on the Earth (with no apparent logic wrt why the other 2/5 were spared), or even make the Matrix collapse and make us wake up in the Real World (TM) ;-) .

    At least if new dimensions appear/are created we could hope that they are like ours (the probabilities are bigger than unrelated ones. Explaining why is left as an exercise to the reader).

  12. when a black hole finally evaporates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm... if I remember right from the Steven Hawkings book, when a black hole finally evaporates, it also explodes with the force of millions of hydrogen bombs. Not In My Backyard, pleeze.

    1. Re:when a black hole finally evaporates... by arielb · · Score: 1

      yes please -don't screw up MY universe,ok? go nuke some other universe

      --
      ---
    2. Re:when a black hole finally evaporates... by Vrongar · · Score: 1

      It has to have the mass/energy of a million H bombs to do that. A Hole with the m/e of two gold nuclei will just make a pretty spark.... 4.something Mev per atomic mass x about 170 x 2, about 1.5Tev.... 1.5 x 10^12. 1 eV = 10^-19 joules. 1 watt for a ten-millionth of a second.

      Whoop-de-whoop.

      Unless it's Gev per atomic mass, in which case it'll be 1000x more powerful.

  13. Re:Unlikely. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FFS. Obtain clue before proceeding. Take steps to find out something about the subject on which you are about to spout off before doing so.

  14. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Just a thought... and on the subject of misspending, imagine if our governments had put the money behind echelon to a legitmate purpose...
    In what way is Echelon not "legitimate"?
  15. next summer's blockbuster movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    great, here come the blockbuster disaster movies..

    1. Re:next summer's blockbuster movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahaha Sledge Hammer was awesome. I remember that show very fondly...

    2. Re:next summer's blockbuster movie by StimpyBoy · · Score: 1

      If it was accurate, it wouldn't be much of a movie:

      Scientist 1: Okay, so let's start this...
      Brilliant yet psycho scientist: NO YOU'LL FORM A BLACK HOLE!
      Scientist 2: Be quiet psycho! Let's start..
      Scientist 1: Okay, all readings normal. OH SHI...

      *POOF*

      Fin

      Now, how could that possibly be exciting? :)

    3. Re:next summer's blockbuster movie by SEWilco · · Score: 2
      THE FOLLOWING EPISODE TAKES PLACE SEVEN YEARS BEFORE THE EVENTS AT THE END OF THE PREVIOUS SEASON

      That is how "Sledge Hammer" dealt with the previous season's finale where the hero dealt with a problem involving a nuclear bomb.

  16. Re:IT IS A PROBLEM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it could happen, it would have happened billions of years ago.

    IT DID HAPPEN BILLIONS OF YEARS AGO!!!!!!

    One Big Bang! is enough for a lifetime. They say that Sadam Hussein and Hitlery and Bin Laden and Manuel Ortega and Fidel Castro and Slobodon Milosovic are ethnic clensers but this would be even worse than ethnic clensing because it would genicide all of the life on this planet and beond!

  17. Re:Larry Niven Stories... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember the story, didn't think it was Niven, but could have been. Too bad nobody write cheap pulp science fiction any longer...

  18. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about if they spent all the money they piss away on welfare programs on scientific advancement of any sort? 2 (or is it 3?) trillion dollars spent since the sixties with no measurable improvement. Gotta love it.

  19. Hmmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Just what do you propose as prospective list of priorities for humanity?

  20. Re:Physicist steps in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you think you know what you're talking about? hmmm... so why bother with experiments, why don't you just give them all the details on what would happen?

  21. Stuff of comic books by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I heard this just now on the radio, it sounded like one of those news reports in a B sci-fi flick: "Scientists report that the new 'Mega-Laser', with the potential to destroy the entire planet, is undergoing testing in an undisclosed location..." I was waiting to hear about the strange disappearance on Dr. Sly Conniving and the coincidentally missing blueprints.

    Well, I got home to find out more, figuring it would be slashdotted. Sure enough...

  22. Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would have to have sex at least once before I were to die.

  23. Same for fusion bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I don't know the story about the fission bomb, but when Teller did his first bang, scientist were not able to give a definitive "NO" to the question, if the fusion would jump over to the hydrogen and maybe even some other atoms in the atmosphere.

    Seems to be typical American to say "Before anybody else get's a change, let *US* blast this planet away.".

  24. I thought a cosmic ray didnt really collide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given that they arent actually particles but just electromagnetic waves... Now I know they do not usually give off all their energy to atoms they disrupt, otherwise bubble chambers wouldnt work. Do they ever give off all their potential energy in one collision with a nucleus? Like these gold ion's obviously will.

    1. Re:I thought a cosmic ray didnt really collide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cosmic rays aren't just photons. They're a class of high energy particles including photons, beta and alpha particles, and other heaver ions.

      To keep the accelerator from destroying the earth, one just has to say "klatu, verada, nicto." :)

    2. Re:I thought a cosmic ray didnt really collide? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      A two atom black-hole would probably evaporate!

      "Cosmic rays" are generally electrically charged ions, i.e., atoms from which one or more electrons have been stripped or added (unusual). Most of the ions are protons (Hydrogen ions). Next most common are alpha particles (Helium ions). The other ions are rare enough that if they have special names, then I don't know them. Some very small percentage of the ions will be made from atoms heavier than iron. Of these, an extremely small percentage will be gold (or heavier). They're rare, but they exist. There would even be some uranium ions. Occasionally there would be head-on collisions out in space, say 100 miles above the earth's surface. If a black-hole were to be formed then, it would be likely to be captured (head-on collision, remember). Then it could spiral in slowly. If it were still in the atmosphere (and charged [almost certainly]), then this would be easily detected via a cloud-chamber like reaction. This would also slow down the orbit, so it would spiral into the crust.

      OTOH, the capture cross-section would be so small, that it might not matter. It would probably evaporate rather than accumulate mass.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  25. How does that quote go? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will be instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable.

    There is another which states that this has already happened."

    "The Restaurant at the end of the Universe", -Douglas Adams

  26. Re:Appocalypse Now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you are just looking for an excuse to do
    some serious partying two years in a row :)

  27. Re:Appocalypse Now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this could explain why we haven't discovered any
    extraterrestrial intelligence out there. Shortly after
    an alien civilization develops technology, they
    accidently turn their planet into a black hole.

  28. Re:Physicist steps in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe that the General Failure comment is called a joke. Something similar to what you tried to do with your post, I think, but unlike Physicist Bob, you didn't know what you were talking about.

  29. Re:Big Bang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read in another article that the accelerator mentioned here is running off of beta 3 of Win2k.

  30. Re:As long as they tell me before they try it out. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you want to have a big bang before the big bang?

  31. back holes as communication devices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now modulate the magnetic field around it with a carrier to make the black hole bob up and down, then superimopose your data... instant gravity wave communicator. Ok, only a transmitter, but a reciever should be easy to build since gravity waves expand and contract the matter they travel through. Piezo electric materials should generate electricity in response to sufficient gravity wave amplitue.

    1. Re:back holes as communication devices by shogun · · Score: 1

      Hmm maybe we are listening on the wrong band totally with SETI. Any sufficiently advanced civilisation might be communicating/broadcasting using modulated gravity waves. Therefore we should be submitting any results from that detector to SETI@Home to analyze...

    2. Re:back holes as communication devices by HiThere · · Score: 1

      You need to match the wave-length. Maybe you could bob-it in time to call digital watch crystals? (CPU clocks?) :-)

      More seriously, does ANYONE know what size/shape/composition of antenna should be used? AFAIK, noone has detected any yet. This bird may not fly. (Good thing to investigate though.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re:back holes as communication devices by MindStalker · · Score: 2

      Sounds great, but what good would it do, from what I've heard, (could be wrong, but I have asked around) gravity waves travel at approximatly the speed of light, so seriously, I don't see how this would do us any good. Now if gravity waves traveled at infinate speeds, that would be something.

    4. Re:back holes as communication devices by QuantumET · · Score: 1

      The Jet Propulsion Laboratories in Pasadena, CA, is actually building a gravity-wave detector; the actual building sites are far from civilization. Essentially, if I remember right, they're gigantic laser inferometers, a mile or so in length (don't know exact number) that will detect gravity waves contracting and expanding the mass they travel through through the changes in the laser inferometry

  32. Re:IT IS A PROBLEM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, it didn't. It wasn't referring to a Big Bang, but to strangelets taking everything over. A Big Bang happened, not strangelets taking over all other forms of matter. And RHIC won't produce a Big Bang. It's observing reactions that (believe) happened just after the Big Bang, those founding reactions that allowed you to eventually come about and be a paranoid, subliterate fool. I suppose you're also afraid of fluoridated water? Have to protect your precious bodily fluids from the Commie "preverts?" [sic]




    formatting? bwahaha!
  33. Re:Unlikely. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm assuming the guy is a little upset that the first guy was saying that there could possibly be anything wrong with the most humane gavernment/nation to ever exist. He can't have any of that anti-American talk in his presence. Anything to the contrary of pro American is lies LIES LIES! That's what I'm assuming he is thinking and why he replied with what he did.

  34. Re:Physicist steps in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't you read and learn about the scientific method before you go shooting off your mouth?

  35. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I understand what you're saying, however, I would rather governments invest in things like this, than spending billions on military (misleading referred to as defense in the US), more prisons, and corporate welfare. But of course, (western) politicians are there to serve the rich/corporations (who help them finance there are extremely costly campaigns among other things), and keep the commoners like ourselves out of their business.

  36. bah. you've seen too much jurassic park by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but I agree with you on the plants specially modifed to die off. I don't know what the answer is- clearly the biotech companies need a way to ensure that their investments pay off- but this is not the way.

    1. Re:bah. you've seen too much jurassic park by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Genetically engineered crops are doing a pretty good job of destroying the Monarch Butterfly population.

    2. Re:bah. you've seen too much jurassic park by nitsuj · · Score: 3

      He's really not far off.
      The agricultural industry is pretty messed up. There is not any good control over Monsanto and the like who are cramming new genes into plants as fast as they can.

      The genes in the altered plants cross with wild-types. The recommendation is to keep a "buffer" zone of empty land around the modified plants. Yeah, like any farmer is going to leave several fields clear because it might have an impact on surrounding wild-types.

      That really bad part, however, is things like:
      1. All those genetic crops have some kind of antibiotic resistance gene (used in the laboratory to select for transgenics). Eat enough of the crop and eventually you're going to get bacteria in your gut with the resistance, too.
      2. They're inserting genes which cause constitutive expression of pesticides. This will breed resistance in under 5 years. It's just idiotic. And, of course, these pesticides they're inserting are natural pesticides (various enzymes) which are the kind used by organic farmers. Organic farmers will not have viable pesticides for much longer. There are other options, such as breeding insects to eat the problem insects, but it's complicated and expensive.

      Summary: The agricultural industry is short-sighted, dangerous, and not under any real governmental regulation. The USDA is a joke, and the FDA usually doesn't get involved (too busy with the drugs).

      The whole industry is running on the assumption that science will fix the problems they're creating faster than the farmers can make new problems. It will collapse eventually.

    3. Re:bah. you've seen too much jurassic park by MuppetBoy · · Score: 1

      The part that scares me about GM foods is how incredibly ignorant and passive the American public is. I read recently that 30+% of all corn in America is GM now. Although I think it's an insane risk (worst case, we're talking cascading global crop failures) for a negligible payoff to farmers (and zero payoff to consumers), what's really crazy is that they don't have to label it! I'm greatly heartened by all the protest in Europe. It sounds like they may be forced to label GM food over there soon and there is talk of increasing government subsidies for organic farming. Both are good results. America could really learn some social lessons from Europe. There's more to life than the almighty dollar.

    4. Re:bah. you've seen too much jurassic park by grayghost · · Score: 1

      The studies on the Monarch butterfly affected by BT pollen showed, in a lab, that if the catepillar ate the BT pollen vs. non BT pollen (The pollen happens to fall on the leaf of a different plant they are eating) they grew slower and had a higher mortality. What do you think happens when the farmer sprays his non BT crop with pesticides to kill the corn borer the BT protects against. I would guess the pesticide nearly wipes out the nearby catepillars. After all the corn borer is just a different spiecies of catepillar.
      In my opinion GM crops are the best chance to have a sustainable crop production without dumping tons of chemicals on the crops and into the ground, like is the current pratice.

  37. "time is a two-way street" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes you're right, there's also another story by Larry Niven called "time is a two-way street" I believe, in which our moon gets destroyed by a micro black hole. (This happens about 3 billion years ago; the net result is that without an oversized moon to strip away our atmosphere, Earth becomes a greenhouse planet like Venus, and... heh. read the story.)

    1. Re:"time is a two-way street" by SEWilco · · Score: 2
      Actually, when our Moon was torn out of the Earth a lot of the upper crust and primitive atmosphere were ripped away. The result is our thin atmosphere and relatively thin crust.

      With our full share of atmosphere we'd have a much higher pressure and greater greenhouse effect. We also would have much more silicon and fewer metals available at the surface. Plate tectonics might also not be operating, so our present cycling of carbon and water back to the surface might not be happening. The Earth's core might also not be rotating and generating magnetism the way it is.

      Our planet would be more like Venus. But it is not because the Moon is there but rather how the Moon appeared there.

  38. Re:Unlikely. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    umm.. a north american government is running this project, namely the USA.
    I know you were talking about mexico though.

  39. Re:Let me quote Slash Hammer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sledge ?

  40. The Day the Earth Stood Still by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You might be thinking about _The Day The Earth Stood Still_. In that, an alien came to earth to inform us that since we were still very war-like, had developed nuclear weapons, and were in the process of developing space flight, we were now a threat to the other peacefull species in the universe. He gave us a choice: either give up our war-like ways and live in peace with ourselves and the rest of the universe, or be destroyed for the good of the universe.

  41. Blow up the Earth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe the Tick said it best:

    "Blow up the Earth? I hope not! That's where I keep all my stuff!"

  42. Re:That's the thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The thing is, it _evaporates_ at a rate related inversely to its mass (with a high grade power law). Think about it. Black holes evaporate due to quantum effects. With a *small enough* black hole, it simply would disappear as soon as it formed.

    Also, a black hole formed from such a small amount of energy/mass would have a capture cross-section so small as to be essentially non-existant. It would be like neutrinos - trillions shoot through your body every second and it is quite possible that in your entire lifetime not even *one* will interact with a particle in your body.

    Lastly, cosmic rays with *many* times the energy of this experiment hit the Earth quite frequently. If there was any significant probability of such untoward effects at these kinds of energies - the Earth would have disappeared billions of years ago. As would have the Sun, the other planets and the rest of the Universe.

  43. Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't give me this crap about "since the Big Bang that formed the universe between 12 billion and 15 billion years ago" It's crap, don't believe this shit. Read yer bible, you'll see just how it happened. MAN, will never be able to do this, Because MAN don't even know how to begin, the Big Bang has been fake for many years now, HELL the people who started even said it was a fake on their deathbed. Report some real news. Just don't waste my time and tax dollars on something so stupid. Being a *GEEK* don't mean i have to believe in bullshit like the Big Bang, I happen to believe in our Lord GOD, which btw will be coming soon. I mean, even GOD was a Geek, he's the one who made us, So we all fit right in with him. Kinda cool to think about eh?

    1. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AMEN BROTHER!!!!!! THE BIGBANG IS A LIE JUST LIKE THE HALICAUST!!!!1! THE SECULER HUMANIST SCIENTISTS DONT WANT YOU TO KNOW THE TRUTH OF CREATION!!!! THEY WANT TO BE WORSHIPED LIKE GOD SO THEY MAKE UP THE BIGBANG BUT THEY ARE FALSE!!!!! THEY PRETEND TO NO IT ALL BUT THEY ARE LOST!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    2. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh, Next they'll be sayin' the ICE age in coming.. and the sun is going to burn out.
      Some people, I mean they just don't get it.
      With in this year and next, big wars will
      break out with the US. Stuff is happening
      that most us *GEEKS* should understand and know.
      That way you will know what to do. But damn
      missleading schools and most of the world
      won't let the true *GEEK* do what it they
      do, without filling there head with CRAP
      about *bigbangs* and alot of other misleading
      crap. By faith are you saved. Not thinking about
      bigbangs, and other junk. Hey geeks go get a bible
      get saved, have faith in Lord GOD, and have some
      fun programing on earth while you can.

      I love it, GOD gave me life in a time period
      where i can be a high-tech geek, have faith
      watch him come back and take us to Heaven. Now
      who says there's not a GOD. I mean sheesh, just stop and think about it people.

      The best thing they could come up with was that there was a "big bang" and we all came from "monkeys". PLEASE give me a break. If thats
      so, why didn't all monkeys become human? Where is
      the inbetween bone remains of the "monkey/man" ??
      Wanna know? Read a bible, it's on the 1st page!

      -Just a geek

    3. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AMEN, sure beats burning in hell forever... :)

    4. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, like you could stop it.
      Even your major new people won't
      even know what happened. I feel
      so sorry for the ones that will
      still be here after it. Just think
      with all the good guys like, police,
      churches, very few goverment people
      all gone, who will be here to make sure
      you have freedom??? hmm...

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

      (CNN REPORTING FROM DOWNTOWN)
      Today it seams that 24m+ have just disapeared.
      Not even us at CNN can tell you where they went
      because we havn't a clue.

    5. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your rant leads me to ask, "Does believing in God mean you have to be stupid?" If so, then I'm really not interested.

    6. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like how you capitalized the G in "Geek" to show your respect and reverence for God.

    7. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by demon · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but I have a hard time believing that some guy in the sky magically made things. I tend to believe in things that can be proven (i.e., science). And, at least scientific theories have some basis in fact.

      Besides, if religion is so sacred, how come it's been changed with the passage of time to accomodate what were (at the time) non-Christian beliefs? At least when scientific views change, it's an attempt to make things make more sense.

      "Religion is the opiate of the masses." -- Karl Marx

      "... the Bible is a ... [work of] fiction ..." -- Janeane Garafolo (paraphrased)

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
    8. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by dxkelly · · Score: 1

      How do you know the big bang wasn't the response to God's decision to create the universe.

    9. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by Graymalkin · · Score: 1

      Your screaming seems to scream out "moderate me"

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    10. Re:Don't anyone believe in GOD? by JohnnyCannuk · · Score: 1

      No.

      --
      Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
  44. Re:Where would chain reaction energy come from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever seen a pot of uranium or plutonium? Where's the
    energy there?
    Ever seen a pot of plutonium after an A-bomb has
    exploded?
    Where does this energy come from?!? Wow, this must be magic!

  45. Re:Big Bang? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you idiot !
    you can't create a "new universe" by demolishing a couple of electrons. the universe may have started the same way, but the theoretical "big bang" happened in a singularity infinitely more massive than this planet! not quite the same as a couple of electrons in a 4-deminsional pre-existing universe.

  46. Re: Seriousness of the UK "Quality Press" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Sunday Times has the nickname 'Britains biggest tabloid' for exactly this reason. They like shock tactics, combined with inaccurate journalism. Most or all of the quality broadsheet papers are better.

  47. Re:Physicist steps in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    okay you posers! I graduated from MIT in Physics and acquired my phd at Cambridge in England! I specialize in quantum relativity and I would consider myself and expert on such matters. However, nobody knows exactly what the outcome will be! We can only guess for now! A GUESS! Leave it at that! I am not going to go into the details of the subject but just know that these physicists know what they are doing! They will use best judgement, I'm sure!

  48. I believe it was... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Union General John Sedgewick at the Battle of Spotsylvania.

    Actually, I think it was "They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist..."

    Then again, I wasn't there ;)

  49. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Government research pays off, no matter what that research is in, because YOU end up owning it. Not some company in California who will charge you nicely if you want your children to have blue eyes.

    At least momentarily. Unfortunately the universities usually sell most of their patents to industries for pennies of what they are actually worth.

  50. Re:Physicist steps in... !!!!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like to use! exclamation points! Exclamation! points! are! fun!!! Bang! Bang! Bang!

  51. THIS is the priority. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If discovering what the Universe and ourselves are made of wasn't priority number 1, we would still be swinging around on vines... Curiosity is in our make up, and the lengths we will go to to satisfy it is what separates us from animals.


    1. Re:THIS is the priority. by Deimos_ · · Score: 1

      Your right, curiousity is in our makeup. Unfortunatley, It makes up about 10% of our composition. the other 90% is greed. I find this really sad.

  52. Re:As long as they tell me before they try it out. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But what happens if the world fails to end on schedule? :)

    Daniel

  53. At last we can explain Area 51... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "At last we can explain Area 51..."

    Yes, but there is still no explanation for Partition 23.

  54. Re:Cheap doomsday device though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i wonder if microsoft is developing a windows version of this super collider..

  55. Re:hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't mean for it to be funny, And as for news, Well you won't find it under a big name, well you can, but i don't think you know what i'm talking about...

  56. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    unemployment. In fact, right now, the unemployment rate is practically zero. The 5% who are not working are mostly between jobs or are seasonal workers. Anyone with any skills at all has no trouble finding a job.

    Hmmm, I guess you don't think 8 million unemployed adults is much? It's convenient they use percentages since it always sounds like so much less than it really is.

    So I think you're just confused. Without capitalism, we would all be back to the middle ages, working at manual labor tasks and giving our meager surpluses to our fuedal lords. Capitalism has liberated the common man.

    Hahaha. If you haven't noticed, capitalism is modern day feudalism. I don't know if your observation skills are poor or something. You work for a corporation doing work for the good of the corporation. In exchange you are paid a wage (a wage is need in order to keep the person living and purchase their products). This wage is usually not anywhere near reflective of the work the worker produces. Also, look at the structure of the corporation. It's hierachal, just like feudalism was. Are the people at top democratically elected? Is anyone above your work position democratically elected? Are your constitutional rights really gauranteed while at your job in a corporation? They can claim they are, and turn around and fire your ass claiming it was because of something else. This is tyranny. It's just corporations are very vague, they're mobile...so people have a hard time grasping how they actually work and are.

    What causes the unemployment is primarily the government. Things like minimum wages, Welfare, labor regulations, etc. Without these, the markmet would adjust so that pretty much anyone could get a job and support himself. If you don't believe me, ask yourself why almost everyone gets payed more than the minimum wage? Has the "downward spiral" not completed yet? Wages are currently increasing.

    Where the hell do you live? Almost everyone gets paid more than minimum wage? Are you out of your mind. Why do many corporations use labor in third world countries? Jesus Christ. If you haven;t noticed, capitalism is unpredicated, and not logical whatsoever. Corporations need to keep making profits, and they do this through dropping the cost of their production. They have to eventually look for cheaper labor, cheaper production methods, etc. Now, common sense will tell you these corporations will need people to buy their goods. Common sense will tell you we are going to run out of natural resources soon. Common sense will tell you are ecosystem is being screwed up. The corporations are not human beings, they are faceless profit seeking vultures.

    Another thing, what do you think about corporate welfare? Or the wars the US government engages to protect oil and third world labor for it;s corporations? Do you think these extremely costly things are fine, but paying the poor (who are obviously in that position because of the nature of capitalism) is not okay? It's our fucking money, why should we be paying some corporations who are fucking us over?

    Why do all right-wing capitalists sound like brainwashed cult members?

  57. Re:Oh Great, Jack VanImpe will have a field day no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm, maybe if you know anything about some of the things that are happening in other places, you just might think other ways. Do you have even a small clue? You are they types that disgrace us true geeks.

  58. Greedy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These are silly statistics. It is unlikely we're as greedy as people always imagine. If we were, we certainly wouldn't exist in this capitalist system since the work we (the average person) do, usually returns less than what it's worth. If we were greedy we would have all been protesting immediately and demanding we get back what we produce.

    I think we have a high curiosity level, which often gets confused with greed. Say you equate wanting to possess more music, a better computer and so on with greed. But, do you just let that music and computer collect in some room? You want that material so you can enjoy it, see what it's like, etc. Now, if you get sick of, or really dislike the music, you are going to be less protective of it. When the computer gets outdated, you'll want to dispose of it. If we were so ruthlessly greedy, we would never dispose of anything we get. We would want to acquire everything...rather than just possessing stuff we are interested in.

    We also often throw many, even valuable things away, and if we were so greedy, we would just collect these things and never let anyone have them.

  59. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell is all this about "corporations"? Most Americans are emplyes by small businesses, not "huge, faceless corporations."

    As a small business owner myself, I don't ascribe to the theory that I am part of some mass collusion to opress the working class.

    Another paranoid socialist heard from! Stupid.

  60. C'mon, money really does grow on trees! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Atleast for all practical purposes it does. What do you think the bureaucrates do with the money? They spend it! What do they spend it on? Stuff! What kinda stuff? Technology stuff! You see, ALL of the money eventually ends up funding more trivial things like consumer technology. What money has a hard time getting spent on is ground breaking research like this. Private companies can't afford to spend money on such research. Except for the steam engine almost all modern life is a direct result of governments and wars. If it wasn't for government there is no way we would be as "advanced" as we are!

  61. Re:cosmic ray energies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thanks - now i will be able to sleep


    "My ancestors were toro fecundians ... they could smell bullshit from a mile away." - Dan Akroyd - The Couch Trip

  62. Re:Black holes don't "suck" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gravitons are their own antiparticle, and even if anti-gravitons were different from gravitons, they still wouldn't have opposite "gravitational polarity" in the sense of repelling each other gravitationally. Gravity is attractive for all particles, matter or antimatter. Furthermore, gravitons are not "vital" for exotic matter (the latter meaning pretty much anything that violates the classical energy conditions); they are unrelated.

  63. Why stop at spoofing only the earth ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't these *pr* scientists talk about their real plan, which is to build a great big f'ing black hole, one that could eventually suck down the entire universive.

    That way, they can make the whole damn schebang can start over again. Maybe next time aroung, truth, justice and beauty will have a chance!

    The true purpose of "big" science in a Marxist economy (and the London Times is totally Marxist) is cultural terror and pessimism. I'll bet the Times' newsprint piece, if they ran it that way, had advertisements right next to it for sex, drugs and rock and roll in one form or another. The jist of the piece is not science, it is just more sex, drugs and rock and roll. Now that open source community of physicists have blasted the "nuclear winter" theory of Karl Sagan out of the water (he was truly the Barry Mannilow of nuclear science), these Marxists half-ghouls invent this crap.

    Millennium, huh? Maybe Hillary could throw the switch. Make a great kick off for her New York campaign. Technology: Two cars in every garage and a black hole in every kitchen, and lots of sex, drugs and rock and roll in case the plant earth accidentally goes spoof. Of course, then Al would be right. Baahhhh.

    On thing you can count on. The total Marxist FUD of the London Times can *always* be ignored.

  64. Re: Not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The committee is to examine the possibility that, once formed, strangelets might start an uncontrollable chain reaction that could convert anything they touched into more strange matter.


    Convert everything they touch into themselves?

    Ice 9, Anyone?
  65. Resonance Cascade Scenario by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good thing I was prepared for this by playing Half-Life. Now all I need to do is find a HEV and a crowbar.

  66. Re:Conservation of energy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh oh- so either the total amount of energy in the universe is undefined, the duration of the universe is undefined, or someone's using limits :)

  67. Aliens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine the fit aliens sitting in their space-ship close to Pluto would have if the Earth suddenly changed into a black hole or transformed into strange matter. Bwaha... ;)

  68. Re:As long as they tell me before they try it out. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, I bet this is just a ploy by all those wacky physicists at Brookhaven to score some trim.

    "Hey baby, the world's possibly going to end tomorrow. What's say you and I go back to my place and shag?"

  69. Re:IT IS A PROBLEM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so, who told you bin laden, ortega and castro were ethnic clensers?
    You are absolutely right after that. It *would* be worse
    please don't run around waving your ignorance and lack of typing skills

  70. Re:Appocalypse Now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reminds me of a quote from some field commander in the US civil war:
    "At this range they couldn't hit an elephant!" Those were his last words. :)


    General John Sedgwick, at the Battle of Spotsylvania. And his actual last words were "they couldn't hit an elephant at this dist.."

    No, really.

    jsm

  71. Re:Even a small black hole would be very bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These formulas don't apply to quantum-effects. Don't have it right here but i know :-)

  72. Re:lame. Yeah Microsoft stuff usually suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    maybe this will bw the first time they develop something that doesn't suck.

  73. Re:Welfare is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I don't have statistics,
    Why am I not surprised ?
    Governments in general spend about twice as much to do the same job as the private sector does
    This is just what you think. There many examples where you see the opposite. One example is healthcare that in the US costs 11% of BNP and the results (life expectancy) is worse than many european countries which spend 8% of their BNP on healthcare.


    It's better to give 10 Billion to the 10% poorest people on earth than to give Bill Gates an extra 10 Billon. There are a lot of human resources wasted because of poverty.


    I think the optimal society is capitalism moderated by strong giverment.

  74. Oh, my God! THEY CROSSED THE STREAMS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You bastards!

  75. Hawkings is a spaz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In case you haven't noticed, Steven Hawkings is president of Spaz Central.

    1. Re:Hawkings is a spaz by r_hakz · · Score: 1

      And your mother was a slug


      --
      The oxen are slow, but the earth is patient... - High Road to China
  76. Robert Sawyer: Flash Forward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Robert Sawyer wrote a book called "Flash Forward" discussing similar ideas: a particle collision as CERN causes the collective human consciousness to jump forward 20 years for 2 or 3 minutes. Everyone gets to see a glimpse of their lives 20 years in the future... Pretty cool book! Not the end of the world, though...

  77. Hyperion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just like that

  78. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >>No matter how hard you work to make something idiotproof, someone will always come along and make a better idiot.

    You're proof of your own signature.

  79. Re:The problem is that they're scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    or maybe a politician bans the project after public pressure. or maybe there is a sit -in protest by fanatics. don't be so damned naive.

  80. Re:Welfare is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Er, check the studies. The program you cite, "Head Start", was a failure in that there were no significant lasting effects on participants. Following re-assimilation in the rest of the system, they pretty much relapsed.

    The only known educational help-type programs are *far* more intensive, expensive, and: (very important) *selective*.

  81. Re:Welfare is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With all due respect, BG would probably accomplish more with that 10B than the poorest people on Earth. Most of the poor wouldn't have a clue or even means to do anything useful with it, because A) they're poorly educated, and B) many live in areas with approximately nil infrastructure.

    As an example, if I were to drop you in, say, a remote part of the Congo with nothing but what you're carrying right now, and perhaps US$100K in the local currency, you probably wouldn't get very far. In fact, if it were obvious to the various (combative...) locals, they'd probably kill you for the money...

  82. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will only reply to part of this.

    "Anything that is good is good for someone for some purpose. If the research is economically unsound then it is good for no one - i.e., bad - because it is a waste of money."

    Yes, and good scientific research is good for science. While much of the basic research seems to have no applications yet, 50 years down the road there will be. You MUST have a good foundation in basic science in order to bring about future technologies. Can the government do applied research better than industry? Sometimes. You really need to get specific about that one. Can the government to basic research better than industry? A resounding yes, and since modern ages it has always been that way.

    Plus there are issues in basic science that are of interest to public policy, but not to industries. Ozone, climatology, ecology, these are things that industries don't study. That's why you can't depend on industries to be the core of your general research program.



    "So who do you trust? The gov't or industry? I'd trust neither, but industry doesn't extort money from me."

    Dude, do you belong to a bank? The only word for all of those fees on top of fees is extortion. First they get to take your money, invest it and make a profit. Now they are so greedy they want to hit you up every time you use an ATM or write a check.

  83. Re:Appocalypse Now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > "A successful test-firing was held on Friday and the first nuclear collisions will take place in the autumn, building up to full power around the
    > time of the millennium. "

    > So January 1st, y2k, we won't need to worry about computer failures - they're putting this thing in full swing.

    If it gets into full swing around the start of the next millenium, that'll be a year after the Y2K thing sorts itself out.

    (That's assuming that the authours of the original article know when the start of the millenium is, though, and I'll grant you that that's unlikely.)

  84. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm glad your such an economic Einstein! What would the world do without people who understand economics as well as you? "I read this book by this guy, and like he said that corporations are in the control of the workers! Cheaper labor is good! Barely anyone is homeless are in poverty! He told me everything was all right, and those wacko leftist are dumb asses who don't know anything! He gave me statistic A and statistic B and I am so enlightened. I wish everyone could see the greatness of capitalism like me. I wish everyone wasn't so lazy so we wouldn't need welfare. All you have to do is work a little harder, and you work hard enough, you'll be a billionaire. He told me capitalism frees the common man! The common man is so free in his work place, where he spends 50+ hours a week working. he gets to run around nude, curse out his bosses, burn the company flag, promote other companies products, and he gets to do whatever he wishes! We are truly free, and corporations are making the world a better, cleaner place. God bless Neoliberliasm! God bless Ayn Rand the nigger hater and FBI rat!"

  85. Re:Book about this (where to find them) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forever Peace is at amazon.com (of course):
    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/044100566 7/o/qid=932397723/sr=2-1/002-2219200-91330 63

    Thrice upon a Time is also at amazon.com but out of press:
    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/034532386 6/qid=932397957/sr=1-3/002-2219200-9133063

  86. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Such as? Got some statistics for this? Around here, everything is a chain of some sort. From 7-11s, exxons, McDonalds, Taco Bells, Pizza Huts, Bennigans, TGI Fridays, Wal Marts, Targets, Sears, Dillards, The Gap, Jiffy Lube, Barnes and Nobles, Books a Millions, etc. etc. There are barely any small businnesses in comparisn to these chains. Perhaps it's just my city and other cities I've been to.

  87. Re:Give 'em a break, it's probably a PR stunt. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I often wonder why they don't take a 'lead into gold' angle with this stuff.. It's 'possible' isn't it? Bet you'd get some funding for your behind then..

    while it is entirely possible to turn lead into gold, its actually cheaper to just go out and mine the stuff, which is why we dont have any modern day alcemists working with particle accelerators in their basements

  88. That's Badass! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fire it up!

  89. Re:You miss an important point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    heh... Anyone read Earth by David Brin? The storyline is very similar to this discussion. Scientists figured out how to make black holes, then "accidentally" let one loose. It falls toward the core of the earth, gobbling up the mantle and crust as it went. Then one guy figured out how to make gravity lasers to semi-control the thing, etc, etc... It's a very good story. There's also some interesting insight into what the world and the internet may become. Definitely recommend it.

  90. Re:You miss an important point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great book... until the end. I got pissed when aliens, people-pulverizing lasers, and worldwide disembodied intelligences showed up. If I recall, I got pissed after reading the last page, and threw the book across the room. It was an EXCELLENT book until the last 75 pages, or so.

  91. Re:The problem is that they're scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The difference, of course, is that the absolute worst bio-engeneering can do is wipe out all life on earth, but what most people are frightened of is that it will just make a lot of people sick.

    What they are claiming here is a lot worse, the total and nearly instantaneous destruction of the entire planet and perhaps the rest of the universe.

    The first is a lot easier to run away from.

    Incidentally, i support the particle accelerator, I'm just pointing out why this is not the same situation.

  92. Re:tiny black holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um, no.

    You can only get as much energy out as you put in. Conservation of energy works just fine with black holes. Actually, you can only get less energy out than you put in, since you will waste a whole lot trying to contain the thing and then trying to pull the energy you put in back out.

    See the laws of thermodynamics for more information.

  93. Re:Conservation of energy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh c'mon. informally, n/0 can be said to be equal to infinity. The sole reason for this is that no one wants to type/say " the limit as x approaches 0 of n/x equals infinity" when there is a shorter way of saying it.

  94. Long Island Black Hole? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait...this black hole would take out Long Island, as in Fran Drescher aka the 'Nanny'? I'll need a check book and the address for the National Science Foundation. Where would prime viewing locations be? I'll be watching from New Haven

  95. Re:Let me quote Slash Hammer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's SLEDGE HAMMER, damnit! :)

  96. Sometimes people rm -rf / by mistake you know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hehe, i just hope that if our planet is destroyed,
    the admin of our world has a good backup and not
    some microsoft crap.

    rm /earth/core
    cd /earth
    restore rf /dev/nst0
    *coffee pause*
    rm -rf /earth/usa/bnl.gov
    /etc/init.d/earth start

    And all shall go well

    I just hope they have better backup policy then
    most of my clients.

    Anthony

  97. Re:Why it's not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your explaination is mostly correct, but this part is a bit off: "When a pair occurs near an event horizon, one of the particles can tunnel deep enough into it to be annihilated by its antiparticle below the horizon, allowing the partner to escape - as if the particle below the horizon had tunneled out."

    When a pair is created near the event horizon, one of the particles can fall in and the kinetic energy it gains from the fall is what allows the other particle to continue existing. A particle cannot meet up with its antiparticle within the event horizon because everything inside the horizon is smashed into a quantum singularity at the center. In all reasonable models, there are no seperate particles anymore.

    Also "tunnel" does not mean the same as "fall" or "move." The particle is simply falling, not tunneling.

    Everything else was completely correct as far as I know, just thought i should clear this part up.

  98. Re:Whatever happened to..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two quick points:

    super conductiong super collider is abbreviated SSC (superconducting = S), i should know.

    "Is there any difference between the two projects other than size?" Umm, the bigger something is, the more it costs in most cases. Expensive things get cut, inexpensive things don't.

  99. Re:dusting the atmosphere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First of all, plutonium is not a naturally occuring element and can only be obtained (on earth) through nuclear reactions. (Usually, bombardment of uranium-239 with neutrons inside a breeder reactor).

    Second, although the tailings from the uranium mining process are radioactive and dangerous, the radioactive elements are in a relatively low concentration, so using tailings would be much less effective. Also, I'm not sure how much "dusting" would be needed for the population of a city to inhale a large enough quantity of particles to kill them.

    Third, defenses against such dusting, such as the use of "dust-masks", often used in industrial applications would be effective and relatively inexpensive. So at least a military force could be made impregnable to the "dusting" and launch a retaliation.

    Finally, many forms of more effective, cheaper, and more easily obtainable chemical and biological weapons exist, which could be used for the same purpose.

  100. Re:Plan 9 from outer space... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The operating system was named after the movie.

  101. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would I be afraid of a two- atom black hole?
    Such a thing would have the mass of two atoms and therefore the gravitational pull of two atoms. This means that
    1) you wouldn't "fall" into it - it would come to you unless there were a larger object nearby.
    2) there is a larger object nearby - it's called Earth, so the black hole would fall downwards until it was repelled by an electromagnetic field that exceeded the gravatational pull. This is why everything hasn't fallen through to the center of the Earth long ago.

    The reason everthing nearby falls into a black hole isn't because they are black holes, but rather it's because the mechanism for forming black holes begins with massive stars. Stars are big and therefore have a great gravitational field. That's why they are hard to escape from ewhether they are stars or black holes. Also, objects can orbit black holes just like they orbit stars.

  102. Re:tiny black holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Er, well, not quite. Mass-energy is conserved. But rest mass can be converted to energy. Quite a lot of it, actually. Just ask Oppenheimer. Or Sakharov.

    Dropping matter into a black hole is currently the most efficient mass-energy conversion mechanism "known". As charged matter approaches a black hole, it accelerates crazily, generating *intense* radiation. It should be 10 or 100 x as efficient as Hydrogen fusion, even for large black holes.

    And I *do* mean *radiation* -- as in X and Gamma rays. Better lay in a supply of SPF sun screen!

    Further, black holes should evaporate over time by emitting "Hawking" radiation. Temperature rises very fast as size decreases. So tiny black holes may be usefully hot, even when no matter is being consumed.

    This should further boost effective conversion efficiency, if the mass of the black hole can be managed; i.e., does not grow or shrink in the long run.

    Caution: the sucker will explode on you if you forget to feed it!

  103. Re:tiny black holes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Limitless? Close enough. How does 25% mass-energy conversion efficiency sound?

    Clean? Nope. The energy comes out as extremely hard radiation.

    For related Cosmic engineering applications, see Quasars. Also Gamma Ray bursts.

  104. Re:Why it's not a problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This matches my understanding of the current model.

  105. Re:Physicist steps in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1


    So I think I know what I'm talking about.

    --Bob
    Who is General Failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?


    Take anything that a physicist named "Bob" says with a grain of salt. If the guy thinks that there is actually some General named "Failure" reading his hard drive and doesn't recognize it as an ERROR CODE then he is NOT a physicist. Maybe a wannabe like the majority of the people on this newsgroup but definately not a real one.

    I, however, am a REAL physicist and I know lots of things about strange corks. They infect anything that comes into contact with them much like a virus. The infected corks in turn infect others until ALL of the stuff in the universe is strange. This has all happened before and it will all happen again. Ever been to SanFransisco or Puyallup? If so then you know what I'm talking about.

  106. Quarks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I seem to remember that quarks don't even exist except in groups of twos or threes. Whenever you seperate a group of them (proton, etc), each seperate quark will create another one to latch on to it (bad oversimplistic terms, probably). So an isolated quark won't really be isolated.

    If that's the case, I'd assume that the new mass comes from the energy that was put into seperating them in the first place, but it's been a while, and I really don't remember for sure. Anyone who knows their stuff want to clear this up?

    1. Re:Quarks by Tim+C · · Score: 1



      The force that binds quarks together, the strong force, increases in strength as the distance between the quarks increases. (A bit like when you stretch a rubber band - the further you stretch it, the harder it becomes to stretch it further).

      When the distance becomes great enough, the potential energy in the field between the quarks is such that it becomes "energetically favourable" to create two new quarks. (E=mc*c, remember, so mass and energy are entirely equivalent.) These quarks then immediaely bond to the two existing quarks, creating two new particles, and hence preventing us from ever seeing individual quarks.

      So, yup, you were perfectly correct (just don't ask me to start quoting any formulae, it's been a couple of years :o) )

      Tim

  107. Valve predicted this would happen! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Anyone who's played Half-Life knows exactly what playing with strange particles can cause.

    Guess I'd better dig out the old crowbar.

  108. Re:Where would chain reaction energy come from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The whole thing is based on quite an esoteric theory by Witten in 1984. (Probably, everyone regards it as esoteric, including Witten.)
    The assumption is that "our" world is not the real ground state of hadronic matter; it might be something else where strange quarks are just as light as the other quarks; this vast increase in phase space would effectively lower ground state energy. Just kinda the same effect that happens when you open an undercooled bottle of mineral water: it instantly freezes all through.

  109. The Murdoch Times is not even original by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    The first time I heard this theory was in 1983,
    when I was starting as a graduate student in
    physics. I got such a kick out of it I told
    everybody I thought I could scare. Since then,
    I've seen demonstrators picketing just about
    every particle accelerator I've been to, in two
    continents. The mechanism keeps changing to apply
    to the lab being picketed, but the outcome is
    always the same: the Universe is doomed!

    I remember about 6-7 years ago, some guy was
    camping outside Fermilab, distributing leaflets
    to cars entering the site, trying to warn the
    world how the proton-antiproton collider would
    create a black hole that would swallow everything
    (now, what does this remind me of?) The world
    failed to pay sufficient attention, the
    temperature hit 100 F that summer in Illinois,
    and he left in disgust ("Go ahead, destroy the
    Universe - see if I care"). There are limits to
    what one can do to save the world in spite of
    itself.

    It looks like the tabloids are running out of
    royal scandals - everybody is dead, divorced,
    or behaving themselves. Time to branch out into
    science?

  110. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4

    No, there is not a better use of money.

    First of all, far, far money is spent on finding cures for horrible diseases than on high energy physics. For twenty years, the fight against horrible diseases like AIDS has soaked up research money like you wouln't believe (I think it may have been nealy 1/2 the NIH budget at one point). Personally, I don't see that we are too much better off.

    As for what is learned as a result of these high energy experiments, just in the last few years we have learned that the neutrino has mass, the standard model is insufficient, we are beginning to study asymetries such as CP violation (which will explain why the universe exists), why things have mass (or at least we will have found this in the next few years with the discovery of the Higgs bosons). We know that Einstein's theories of gravitation are incomplete. I could give you an incredible list of what these experiments have and will bring to mathematics, physics and astronomy in the future.

    If however, you are not interested in any of that, surely these things are important for their technological spinoffs. High energy experiments...

    brought us the world wide web. Web commerce soon will exceed the money spent on high energy physics.

    is the largest application of superconducting technology anywhere. Were it not for such experiments, we would not currently have superconductor based products, like MRIs.

    Particle accelerators are now often used as treatment for certain cancers and blindness. Funny to think it, but these days every major hospital in the country has a particle accelerator.

    Particle accelerators and storage rings are currently used as a source for x-ray or neutron studies of materials. They are used by virtually every company that makes something, from GM to Intel.

    High energy physics pushes the limits of computation, finds better algorithms, expands clustering and distributed computing technologies. The fastest computer in the world is currently used for nuclear computations.

    The demands of detectors push the limits of silicon and nano technologies. Curretly they are building silicon devices many times smaller than places like Intel even have the technology to do. They pioneer the use of other materials such as synthetic diamond for semiconductor devices (which are functional at far higher temperatures than silicon).

    These are just the examples that come to mind off of the top of my head.

    In short, in addition to their value to science, these high energy experiments push the envelope of every technology they use. The spin offs of these experiments alone are many times greater than their cost.

    Answers to pressing scientific questions. Big, big, big technological spinoffs. You would be very hard pressed to find any better use of the money or manpower. I'd say that the fight against "horrible diseases" is a bigger waste of everyone's resources, but who knows, one day it might produce results, or at least make some progress that would make it worth the time and money.

  111. The problem is that they're scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    So they won't say it "can't" happen, since you can't say that about anything. If you solve the quantum mechanics of picking my nose there is a nonzero probability that I will create Dark Matter which will cause the subsequent distintigration of my nose, me, and the alpha quadrant. That is what our probibalistic universe means. There is just about a nonzero probability of anything.

    Back in the 70s when the first recombinant DNA experiments were taking place, there was a public outcry, mainly a result of politicians stirring up people for political reasons. They dragged a bunch of biologists into court and asked them the probability of creating dangerous organisms, as some scientists had suggested. Of course, the biologists who were about to do the experiments had carefully researched this possibility and come to the conclusion that it was extraordinary- but of course, not nonzero. When they testified, they were repeatedly asked if such a thing could never happen. They had to answer no, of course not, there is always a probability of anything happening.

    Well, the experiments were banned for several years. No one in the world had any problems with inadvertant creation of dangerous organisms, and now recombinant dna experiements are commenplace. But think of the progress that was lost!

    Remember that scientists are people too, and don't want the earth to collapse any more than you do. Saying that something has a small probability is about the safest assurance you can hope for, at least from a real scientist. Articles like this that attempt to use scare-mongering to whip up readership, at the expense of science, are very dangerous for everyone.

    1. Re:The problem is that they're scientists by hurin · · Score: 1

      I can only agree with you. Abouth 4 years ago the problem was with child porn and neo nazism on the internet, and now in Europe it is genetically altered plants.

      I guess there will always be men in power who knows next to nothing about science. But who will try to halt the advancement of mankind to serve their own ends.

      But alas so far they have all failed.

    2. Re:The problem is that they're scientists by Chris+Siegler · · Score: 1

      Articles like this that attempt to use scare-mongering to whip up readership, at the expense of science, are very dangerous for everyone.

      Saying that the accelerator could destroy the Earth is a bit of sensationalism--I agree there. But it grabs your attention, didn't it? If it doesn't this story never get printed.

      So maybe they sell a few more papers. But maybe too a kid finds this interesting enough that he's steered into science rather than law school.

      That's not a bad trade, is it?

    3. Re:The problem is that they're scientists by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I find the commercially inspired genetic tailored plants to be at best dubious. They don't debug the product well. It's like replacing Linux with MS. And the commercial version optimises sales rather than end-user utility.
      The problem is that the vendors don't want to GPL the results. They want to maintain ownership. So they create plants that die out in two generations. Not good. Worse, the "sterility" gene is carried on the pollen to nearby farms, and crosses back into that farmer's crops.
      Also, they design the plants with built-in poisions. This has desired results this year, but it also has been having undesired results. Already. And in a chaotic system it's difficult to predict the result of large-scale perturbations. Controling a chaotic system requires repeated small adjustments, not infrequent large adjustments. The large adjustments will produce changes, but it's impossible to predict how they will develop.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  112. Re:Big Bang? by hurin · · Score: 1

    I guess if you lived in the stone age you would be opposed to fire ?

    If someone had asked 70 years ago what quantum teory was good for. No one could probably give him an answer. But look now we have computers.

  113. Re:Plan 9 from outer space... by hurin · · Score: 1

    No this is the one known as the worst movie ever made. Created by Ed Wood.

    It was about grave robbers from outher space, who resurrected the dead.

  114. Re:Plan 9 from outer space... by Pathwalker · · Score: 1

    Yes, but the grave robbers from space were coming to stop us from developing soem weapon which could ignite the entire universe...

  115. Re:dusting the atmosphere by hadron · · Score: 1
    Nukes are fairly clean ; you can live in a place a few hundred years after you nuked it, and it doesn't affect places on the other side of the planet mcuh.

    Not so with dust.

  116. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by hadron · · Score: 1

    Nonsense. This project could well prove to destroy not just humanity, but the world!

  117. Re:Physicist steps in... by hadron · · Score: 1

    Yeah. Except it wasn't funny.

  118. Re:Plan 9 from outer space... by hadron · · Score: 1

    I thought Plan 9 was from Bell Labs.

  119. Dan Simmons by dmd · · Score: 1

    For those of you who've read Dan Simmons' Hyperion...

    Great. We're gonna get the earth sucked into a black hole, and we don't even have the Hawking drive yet.



    --

  120. On the off chance you are serious... by yet+another+coward · · Score: 1

    The capitalization is part of their style. The first little bit of each article is capitalized. Read some more articles at the site.

  121. priorities by yet+another+coward · · Score: 1

    In this modern age, leading causes of premature death still include poor sanitation, bad nutrition and diseases with cures. We know how to fix them. Just provide decent sewage systems, better diets and basic medicine. Those tasks do not constitute interesting puzzles, however, and they do not help the wealthy, lazy, fat Westerners who already have easy access to good water, good food and good medicine.

    Someone brought up medical research. It gets big money. The push for making older tried and proven treatments widely available is small, though.

  122. Re:The worst case scenario by gavinhall · · Score: 1

    Posted by SmashPHASE:

    Maybe a couple of million years ago, a scientist
    made the same mistake... who knows

  123. Let me quote Slash Hammer: by gavinhall · · Score: 1

    Posted by SmashPHASE:

    "Trust me, I know what I'm doing..."

  124. Unexplained Gamma Ray Events Now Made Clear by gavinhall · · Score: 1

    Posted by alanut:

    Ah - the so called unexexplained Gamma Ray Events are whole civilizations flashing from existence when they tried the same experiment. Unfortunately , the twinkling of an eye leaves little time for an escape plan like Jor-el provided for his son on Krypton.

  125. Re:Appocalypse Now by Threed · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of a quote from some field commander in the US civil war:
    "At this range they couldn't hit an elephant!" Those were his last words. :)


    I like this one:
    "The world is not going to explode. The pacific ocean is not going to evaporate. I am not an atomic playboy."
    --Some high-rank naval officer, on the nuclear tests on a US-depopulated island.

    I'd LOVE a .wav of that quote...



    --Threed

  126. Re:Black holes don't "suck" by nitsuj · · Score: 1

    Gravity is not polar and there is no (known) means of shielding it.

    I thought two particles, gravitons and anti-gravitons, are expected to exist, each with an opposite gravitational "pole". The existence of these quantum particles is vital for exotic matter (and consequently, fun things like exploiting wormholes and warp drives). Right?

  127. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by nitsuj · · Score: 1

    I think it would be quite a nice death. Should be quite fast.

    Actually, entering a black hole would be anything but a fast death. Time slows as you approach the singularity. I think it's possible you'd just be falling for an eternity (or so it would seem to you).

  128. Forever Peace by seth · · Score: 2

    Joe Haldeman (who also wrote Forever War) wrote a book Forever Peace, which had the premise that scientists were building a huge collider in the orbit of Jupiter to study and recreate the big bang, but, as it turns out, would actually create a new big bang, destroying life, the universe and everything.

    Anyways, I find it interesting that the news story and a recent sci fi novel have the same premise.

    1. Re:Forever Peace by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and a bunch of religious wackos in high positions in government try to silence the truth about the consequences, because they actually want the apocalypse to occur.

      Ya know, the year 2000 is approaching, and with the number of Bible-beaters in Congress, it wouldn't supprise me at all if a doomsday cult had worked its way into that many positions of power.

      So, when Brookhaven announces a special experiment to be run on 12-31 at 23:59, to commemorate the new millenium, make your peace with Init(8), cause we're about to be rebooted.

  129. Re:Chasing the God particle by demon · · Score: 1

    s/foolhearty/foolhardy/

    Also, I haven't read the article yet, but this sounds highly theoretical to me. Do you know what a black hole is? It's a tightly-packed core of super-dense matter that becomes a massive gravity well, sucking in matter because of its extremely strong gravitational field. However, the only way I've ever heard of to create a REAL black hole is the collapse of a star. Maybe it's just me... but I'm not going to get too worked up over this.

    Besides, I know I'd rather know that we were trying to learn and improve ourselves, rather than hide our heads in the dirt and chalk all the mysteries of our world/galaxy/universe/whatever to religious things.

    --

    Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
    Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  130. Re:Consider this by demon · · Score: 1

    There is a nonzero chance that YOU do not exist.

    Well, there goes "cogito, ergo sum", I guess. If I don't exist, I guess that would explain a lot of things... and at least make the fucked-up-edness of this world a little easier to believe. :)

    --

    Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
    Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  131. Re:NUCLEAR by demon · · Score: 1

    Well, every atom in the known universe is nuclear in nature. Each one has a nucleus with electrons in perpetual orbit around it. Maybe for the clueless masses it strikes fear, but for me, it's just like, gee, ya don't say?

    --

    Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
    Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  132. hmm by crayz · · Score: 1

    that was pretty funny, though I'm not sure you meant it as a joke(sounded like it). If you want "real" news, watch some CBN. Yeah, right.

  133. HAHAHA by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

    Damn that was funny.

    You were joking, right?

  134. Ice 9 Baby by SEGV · · Score: 1

    Dig that funky chain reaction shit.

    --

    --
    Marc A. Lepage
    Software Developer
  135. Re:primordial black holes by PhuCknuT · · Score: 1

    If you're thinking of the Tunguska explosion, it's been known for a while now that it was an asteroid that exploded entering the atmosphere, not a black hole or anything that rare. And it wasn't shit size of a weak nuke, it knocked down hundreds of square miles of trees and the shock wave set off seismographs on the oposite side of the earth.

  136. Wasn't this a plot of a Gregory Benford Novel? by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    Gregory Benford's Cosm (published 1998) involved the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider's creation of a micro-universe. A pretty good novel, if you like hard-SF. I wouldn't expect of cinematic version, though.

  137. Nah. by rofa · · Score: 1

    The Vogons will beat them to it.

    --
    No sig. Go away.
  138. Re:Black holes don't "suck" by tgd · · Score: 1

    Just because its in "The Science of Star Trek" or whatever that silly book is, doesn't mean its scientific fact.

    There is no good quantum theory of gravity, at least there wasn't a few years ago, and I'd think I would've read something about that. Gravity still isn't well understood.

    Either way the original premise of this thread was just plain wrong too, that the size of a black hole would affect its ability to "suck" in matter. AFAIK there's no theory that they'd be charged entities, so you'd have gravity pulling stuff towards it, and nothing pushing it away. The only hope in that case was that it for some unknown reason passed out of the range of the matter in the earth quickly, or it evaporated faster than it was initially able to suck in the energy.

    I mentioned in another post the book Cosm, which is a fictional story on this exact topic. One idea in there was that the mass of the object in question kept growing because they didn't realize it was there and shut the collider down immediately. There's no reason that wouldn't be the case.

    The point, however, is that the science that predicts that a black hole could occur is the bad science.

  139. Its just stupid by tgd · · Score: 3

    This story has been reported over and over and over in the last few years, all having to do with the accellerator on Long Island. Its bad science, no better than other bad science like the breast implant issues, cancer from high-tension power lines or any other anti-science drivel that seems to be produced in such mass quantities. Reactions more powerful than the ones they're talking about happen all the time in the upper atmosphere. If the possibility was anything more than infintesimal, we wouldn't exist. The fact that we DO exist is proof that even should such a reaction happen, its probably not stable, or is quickly counteracted by some other reaction.

    On a side note though, there was a book that came out a year or two ago, Cosm that dealt specifically with these issues at that specific accellerator I think. Its sci-fi, but I thought it was entertaining. Worth reading if you can get it at the library. Hell, its Gregory Benford, so you can't go THAT wrong.

  140. You miss an important point by Nathaniel · · Score: 1
    If I understand correctly, we are talking about a potentially really really small (mass of a few atoms) black hole, but if somehow we were dealing with a large (massive) one, the first it would do is fall to the center of the Earth.

    So we might not even notice for a long time. The total effect of gravity at the surface of the Earth would still be 1G. This would decrease slowly as the core was consumed because our distance from that matter would be increasing a little bit.

  141. DEFECTION by PG13 · · Score: 1

    The problem with your argument is that there are some types of research companies just won't do. No company will try to discover the laws which govern electrons or strange matter because their is no economic advantage here. Any significant applications will be so far down the line that patents would expire and it is doubtful that you could patent a law of nature.

    Hence any research done in fundamental physics by a company is dollar for dollar research done for their competitors. Hence EVERY company would freeload and no research would be done. Even IBM once doing far more basic research than almost every other company has realized it isn't paying off and is requiring their vaunted scientists to become engineers and make useful products.

    Only the government through mandatory taxation can resolve the defection problem. Hence fundamental physics is something which MUST be government funded.

    Peter

    --
    Marriage is the "pseudo-ethics" that cloaks the messy truth of sexuality in the raiment of propriety -- it's "Don't Ask,
    1. Re:DEFECTION by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I believe that this change was caused by a change in the tax laws. When they could write-off their research then the large companies were proud to do research. It was as good a tax write-off as loosing money, but it raised their status instead of lowering it, so the stock market liked it too. And if the research wasn't obviously useful directly, then they let it be published and used it as a part of their advertising.
      But when the tax laws changed, the cost of doing research increased considerably. So they cut back on it. And what was left they required to be likely to be useful (to them).

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  142. Re:Larry Niven Stories... by Chris+Siegler · · Score: 1

    It's called "Hole Man" (as someone else already pointed out) and he won a Hugo for it, which he found suprising:

    Out of five Hugo awards, this is the only one that surprised me. I always think I earned it; I'm always half-sure I'll take it home; except this once. "The Hole Man" is a straightforward crime story rendered distinctive only by an unusual murder weapon.

    That's from a collection of short stories of his called N-Space--highly recommended.

  143. NUCLEAR by Mad+Quacker · · Score: 1

    Notice how the journalist capitalizes NUCLEAR. Just meant to stir up fear with those not in-the-know. All particle accelerators deal with some sort of nuclear particle.

    --
    "I don't know that atheists should be considered citizens, nor should they be considered patriots." George HW Bush
  144. Re:Big Bang? by Mad+Quacker · · Score: 1

    You're just afriad of what you don't know. Speaking of, they aren't trying to create a universe...

    --
    "I don't know that atheists should be considered citizens, nor should they be considered patriots." George HW Bush
  145. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Mad+Quacker · · Score: 1

    The money put into scientific research is miniscule, compared to everything else, especially offensive/defensive forces (echelon, the military, etc) Last time I checked, US gov't funding of scientific research was shrinking.

    --
    "I don't know that atheists should be considered citizens, nor should they be considered patriots." George HW Bush
  146. I think we should be safe... by Alan+Hecht · · Score: 1

    I think we should be safe as long as nobody discovers a switch on the accelerator labeled "magic" & "more magic", decides it's a silly joke, and flips the switch... :-)

  147. Well... by pirkka · · Score: 1
    Powerlines do cause cancer. Or at least it's not clear whether they do.

    There was a study comparing people living beneath powerlines and people living away from power lines and the first group had more cancer. A little more (like 1%) but more still.

    So what happened because of this? Nothing! Smoking is still a lot more dangerous and living in a city with smog is more dangerous..

    But not everything is "bad science".

    BTW. what breast cancer issues?
    --
    Pirkka

  148. Re:Not a problem by rve · · Score: 1

    How do collisions with an energy greater than the equivalent of two gold nuclei bumping into each other at 99.9% of the speed of light at an angle of 180 degrees occur naturally? Please enlighten me, as I know very little about cosmic radiation.

  149. Well it's not _solaroid bomb_ but... by The+Creator · · Score: 1

    Well it's not _solaroid bomb_ but i guess that well be seeing a sqare space ship land on the earth. They will start raising the dead and march them at us and then rot them in front of our eyez to prove their awsome powers then they will try to tell us that this research will have to stop or we will destroy the whole universe. In the end some people find their sqare ship and go inside. There they find a table with some old radio equipment and two aliens. The aliens boast about their tecnological superiority... BLAM! they shoot the aliens then there is some moral crap in the end.
    We all saw that movie didin't we? |)

    --

    FRA: STFU GTFO
  150. 10:1 says it won't! by The+Creator · · Score: 1

    I'll pay upp i promise! |)

    --

    FRA: STFU GTFO
  151. Give 'em a break, it's probably a PR stunt. by Gray · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a good way to make people more interested sub-atomic physics to me..

    'There is a small possibility we'll destory the earth in the blink of an eye.' makes for a pretty amazing press release... The fact that it's technically true makes it even better.

    I often wonder why they don't take a 'lead into gold' angle with this stuff.. It's 'possible' isn't it? Bet you'd get some funding for your behind then..



  152. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by JPelorat · · Score: 1

    Never!! Prepare the escape pod, Maximillian!

    --
    Hokey statistics and ancient misconceptions are no match for a good thought in your head, kid!
  153. argh by arielb · · Score: 0

    man if this blows up the earth I'd be really really pissed

    --
    ---
    1. Re:argh by Beethoven · · Score: 1

      The moderators have missed this post's irony.

      It is not redundant, it is insightful. It cannot possibly matter if an experiment annihilates all humanity in an instant, because no one will care, because there will be no one to care.

    2. Re:argh by insomniac · · Score: 1

      No you wouldn't

      --
      -- insomniac --
    3. Re:argh by MartinG · · Score: 1

      You've just ventured outside the realms of science and into the realms of theology.

      --
      -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
  154. Re:Igniting the Atmosphere by Pierre · · Score: 1

    Perhaps this is because Ozone if ignited will detonate.

    It turns out that the concetration in the atmosphere is not sufficient to do this.

  155. Re:Physicist steps in... by willfe · · Score: 1

    Bob wrote:
    So I think I know what I'm talking about.

    --Bob
    Who is General Failure, and why is he reading my hard drive?


    An AC wrote:
    Take anything that a physicist named "Bob" says with a grain of salt. If the guy thinks that there is actually some General named "Failure" reading his hard drive and doesn't recognize it as an ERROR CODE then he is NOT a physicist. Maybe a wannabe like the majority of the people on this newsgroup but definately not a real one.

    humor, n, 2: the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor;" "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor" [syn: humour, sense of humor, sense of humour]

    sarcasm, n: witty language used to convey insults or scorn; "he used sarcasm to upset his opponent;" "irony is wasted on the stupid" [syn: irony, satire, caustic remark]

    Read these definitions. It might help you understand. Next, this is a forum, not a newsgroup. Newsgroups are kept on NNTP news servers.

    Why must a physicist be computer literate? I realize it's a stretch to say no computing skills are required, but not all physicists write their own analysys tools, y'know.

    Y'know, I think the last example in sarcasm's definition is quite fitting here. :)

    --
    Read my stuff.
  156. Clearly not a problem, but... by HEbGb · · Score: 1

    Obviously there's no danger of anything catastrophic happening.

    The controversey certainly did bring a lot of attention to the project, though, didn't it? I wonder if they have a really slick publicist, or just lucked out.

    With threats of science funding cuts, this sort of thing is getting more frequent.

  157. Re:Igniting the atmosphere is possible, and fun! by ariels · · Score: 1

    Burning nitrogen requires more energy than it gives (the triple bond is pretty strong). IIRC, the question was whether a nitrogen fusion reaction was sustainable in the atmosphere. It turned out not to be, so we had the nuclear arms race instead.

    --
    2 dashes and a space, or just 2 dashes?
  158. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by djarb · · Score: 1

    Don't get me wrong, I'm not against this sort of research, but couldn't all this money and manpower be better used???

    No, not really. That's 350 million pounds. Million, not billion or trillion. With the world population just having passed 6 billion--on friday, IIRC--that's not enough money to achieve anything significant. If this money were devoted to social causes, it would effectively disappear. It would make no measurable difference. Being used where it is, it is moving us further along the path to understanding the universe. What we understand, we can manipulate beneficially. The potential benefit to every human is much greater this way.
    --

    --
    -- Out of cheese error! Redo from start.
  159. *sigh*, Sunday Times at it again... by Apuleius · · Score: 1

    For those on the Western side of the Pond, you should know that British newspapers are not exactly attentive to accuracy. Credible British journalists usually end up working for the BBC, leaving the Sunday Times and other papers with a beggar's choice of researchers.

    This is the same British newspaper that published the Israeli "ethnic bullet" story because they found one such story in Hebrew and apparently didn't know the Hebrew phrase for "science fiction".
    See here.

  160. cosm by tim+pickering · · Score: 1

    sounds like someone read gregory benford's recent book, cosm, and got scared. in cosm, they didn't make a black hole with RHIC, though, but a mini-universe. the only person who got fragged was a grad student who stood too close when the mini-universe underwent recombination.

    tim

    --
    hiding in shadows / i hear you coming closer / you will explode soon -- a quake haiku
  161. Igniting the atmosphere is possible, and fun! by mahlen · · Score: 1

    I believe the concern was that the tremendous heat could bring atmospheric nitrogen to it's burning point. Since the atmosphere is only 25% oxygen, a nitrogen fire could consume all oxygen fairly quickly. However, i don't know if burning nitrogen produces enough heat to keep the reaction going, which may explain why it hasn't happened.

    But hey, if it did, would it make nitrous oxide? We'd all die laughing our fool heads off.

    I just read "On the Beach", which is about how people face the extinction of the species, in an event that is still far more likely to occur (an atmosphere full of radioactive dust after full-on nuclear war). In this book, i think Albania starts the last war, and the Chinese and the Russians both used Cobalt bombs.

    mahlen

    If God had not given us sticky tape, it would have been necessary to invent it.

    1. Re:Igniting the atmosphere is possible, and fun! by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I thought that there was supposed to be one nitrogen oxide that required less energy to form than to break... N2O5 or some such... can't remember it now, and the source wasn't particularly reliable anyway, but supposedly if one could create the correct catalyst that would hold four nitrogen atoms and 10 oxygen in just the right position, then the reaction would go forward without additional energy. And what saves us is the improbability of getting those 10 atoms in that relationship.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  162. Seti by bstadil · · Score: 0

    Now we know why the Seti project have not yet found anything and why it probably never will ;)

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  163. Re:Unlikely. by Signal+11 · · Score: 1

    And he was telling *me* to obtain a clue... yesh.

    --

  164. Unlikely. by Signal+11 · · Score: 2

    You know, the thing that has always facinating me about nature is it's incredible logic. The most facinating thing to me, is that the world functions at all. Now, I don't know what these physicists are arguing about, or how it could destroy the planet, but I find the entire idea foolhearty, and I'll tell you why -

    (as I recall), in quantum physics, the probability of *anything* simply vanishing without a trace, for no known reason is a non-zero percentage. It's admittedly very small, but not non-zero. It's the same here. I could fart, and rearrange the quarks around me into some heretofore unknown configuration, and oblitherate the planet.So the solution is that I should never fart (and neither should anybody else!). Heh.

    Seriously, we're in far more danger of our government deciding to do some "nuclear testing" on foreign soil and starting WWIII (thus ending the world), than we are of a bunch of physicists doing it.

    Besides... it's the job of evil overlords and certain north-american based governments to cause the destruction of mankind - not a bunch of physicists. Everybody who reads comic books knows that. ;)



    --

    1. Re:Unlikely. by Betelgeuse · · Score: 1

      Please explain what is wrong with his reasoning. I don't understand what the problem is.

      --
      I couldn't tell if you were experimenting with poor-man's cryogenics or looking for the orange sherbet.
  165. What to do by dej05093 · · Score: 1

    So let's build an infinite improbability drive
    before and go to the restaurant at the end of
    the universe ;-)

  166. Re:Appocalypse Now by Jonathan+C.+Patschke · · Score: 1

    So January 1st, y2k, we won't need to worry about computer failures - they're putting this thing in full swing.

    I believe that would be January 1, 2001.


    The following sentence is true.
    The previous sentence is false.
    --
    Pining for the days when The Glorious MEEPT!!! graced SlapDash with his wisdom.
  167. Physicist steps in... by mcelrath · · Score: 4
    Folks, this is patently ridiculous. Strange quarks have been produced in accelerators since the fifties. The notion that strange quarks could start a chain reaction converting things into strange matter is absolutely absurd. For the curious, I direct you to the Particle Adventure, and the RHIC Homepage which will hopefully be more enlightening than the drivel that the Sunday Times spouts.

    Just to make things clear, I'm a grad student in physics, working on the BaBar experiment (at SLAC in SanFran). My analysis involves kaons, which are bound states of strange quarks and up/down quarks. And yes, physics has produced many, many kaons over the years. So I think I know what I'm talking about.

    --Bob

    --
    1^2=1; (-1)^2=1; 1^2=(-1)^2; 1=-1; 1=0.
    1. Re:Physicist steps in... by Tim+Sutherland · · Score: 1

      Perhaps /you/ should reread the definition of joke
      you gave. The poster you replied to was joking
      themselves!

    2. Re:Physicist steps in... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      It's a bit more subtle than most jokes posted here, but actually what we have here is a joke posting in answer to a joke. Read it again if you doubt me!
      (Yes, I've been to San Francisco)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re:Physicist steps in... by SEWilco · · Score: 2

      OK, so you graduated from MIT in Physics.
      But do you have a Physicist Bob T-shirt?

    4. Re:Physicist steps in... by jfetter · · Score: 2
      Hi, Bob!

      The concern isn't about strange quarks; it's about a proposed state of matter called strange matter. Now I should disclaim here that, though I'm a physics grad student too, I don't know what I'm talking about, at least not firsthand... but I've heard people discuss it in seminars, so this is intended to distill those vain assertions, half-truths, and self-important obfuscations.

      The basic idea is that nuclear matter as we know it--that is, stuff made of up and down quarks--is not the true ground state of QCD (the theory which models the interactions of quarks and such). It's possible that there is a stable state of matter which includes up, down, and strange quarks, all bound together; in fact, it's possible that that state is more stable than one which involves just up and down. Now normally we don't see this stuff, because there's a high energy barrier between our Plain Old Everyday matter and this strange matter. But if you get a high enough collision energy, you can tunnel through or just slop over the barrier; and then whammo! the strange matter overtakes the POE matter, like ice nine dropped into water. (Someone call Dr. Strangelove--we've got to guard our POE!)

      For background, see this page and its links. If you want to wade through the hard stuff, try R. J. Holt et al., Physical Review Letters vol 36 page 183 (1976), and E. Witten, Physical Review D vol 30 page 272 (1984).

      Elsewhere, coyote-san asks, "where are the strange stars from the same effect?" Strange stars are entire stars made of strange matter. People are looking for them, but so far there's no positive evidence. One of the problems, as I understand it, is that nobody really knows how they'd look different from plain old garden variety neutron stars.

      The black hole possiblity sounds sexier, but I think strangelets are cooler. :)

      jon

      --
      Data simply _occur_ to me. --Dr. Science
    5. Re:Physicist steps in... by spoon42 · · Score: 2

      Physicist Bob writes...
      So I think I know what I'm talking about.

      Well, drawing from what many people have been saying here, there is of course a nonzero probability that you don't. ;-)

      --
      --- this comment is presented in WIDE SCREEN STEREO!!!
  168. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by zyklone · · Score: 1

    I think it would be quite a nice death.
    Should be quite fast.

  169. Re:As long as they tell me before they try it out. by scrytch · · Score: 1

    Why not now? Minus the greasy junk food, so you can live to keep doing these things. (Why anyone would want to kick off the end of their life with a bag of fritos is beyond me)

    --
    I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
  170. Consider this by scrytch · · Score: 2

    There is a nonzero chance this article doesn't actually exist, but was caused by random fluctuations on your connection.

    There is a nonzero chance that YOU do not exist.

    --
    I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
  171. Re:whow.. how'd you get a 2? by scrytch · · Score: 2

    It's my default post level. Get enough 2's and you stay there. Sometimes it dips back down. Presumably it works in the other direction too.

    --
    I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
  172. The worst case scenario by Larne · · Score: 2
    If current theories are right there is also a chance, again infinitesimal, that this thing could trigger the metastable vacuum. The metastable vacuum is a theoretical region of space that has a lower ambient energy than a regular vacuum. No matter we know of could exist in a metastable vacuum, it would all just sort of evaporate.

    Once created, the metastable vacuum would spread out at the speed of light, eventually deflating the entire Universe. Puts little piddly concerns like the Earth into perspective, huh?

    Still, I'm not loosing any sleep. If there were any real chance of this happening, odds are it would have happened millennia ago. Personally, I can't wait until this thing starts producing data. Science rocks.

    1. Re:The worst case scenario by Grueben · · Score: 1

      But, WOW! Think of all the practical applications...those dust bunnies under my bed? Gone. Crime problem? taken care of. House guests who refuse to leave? Poof! Gone in an instant! Sure, I'd be evaporated too, but that would mean I wouldn't have to come in to work on Monday! ;)

      Where do I sign up?

  173. Re:Ya, GUT by Jacobian · · Score: 1

    Just because we have a theory of everything doesn't mean that anything useful can be computed using it. Just look at QCD. We have all these great theories about quarks, but nuclear engineers can't use them because they are so ridiculously complicated. The engineers use the "fictional" pion exchange model. Just goes to show you. The answer to life, the universe, and everything may be more complicated then you'd have hoped. God didn't neccessarily make the universe so that it would be easy to calculate.

    Gavin E. Gleason

  174. Four comments by Ektanoor · · Score: 1

    1. Comments are moderated. Why submitted stories aren't?
    2. Someone played too much Half-Life...
    3. Strangely enough but in one point this story has a tiny grain of logic inside :)
    4. Don't play with matches ;)

  175. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by alhaz · · Score: 1

    As an aside, the Louvre uses a particle accelerator to study paintings without visibly damaging them.

    They place the painting infront of a target and fire particles through the painting, and by capturing what comes out the other side they are able to determine the materials used in the paint without removing more than a few molicules of it.

    This is vitally important research, if you expect to preserve art for the future. Before they started using the particle accelerator, they were forced to take scrapings of the paintings for chemical analysis - always visibly damaging the painting.

    If you don't know what they made it out of, you don't know how you should gauge the humidity in it's area, what temperatures might damage it, whether you should encase it in glass or let it breathe.

    I don't need to talk to anybody who doesn't think history is important to society.

    --
    This is just like television, only you can see much further.
  176. Welfare is bad by binarybits · · Score: 1

    I don't have statistics, although the 2-3 trillion sounds about right. However, I do think we'd be a lot better without welfare.

    Think about it this way: Welfare is a subsidy on being unemployed. Simple economics tells you that this will increase the number people unemployed. This is why the Welfare rolls have been steadily expanding, and why poverty has not been eradicated by the Welfare stat, but has expanded.

    There are other problems too. Obviously, the money is one problem. Governments in general spend about twice as much to do the same job as the private sector does. The welfare program is riddled with waste and corruption. Also, a private charity organization would have much more incentive to get people off of the dole and onto jobs. So in fact the cost would be a lot less than half what the government spends.

    The basic problem is that charity has come to be seen as an entitlement of the poor rather than a gift from those who pay for it. People who felt that they are simply demanding their rights are much less likely to do anything to get a job. There should be a social stigma about living at the expense of others.

    So yes, people do lose their jobs and need help, but the private sector does a much better job in that roll. Government welfare has perverted charity into a tax-financed industry.

    I know this is an unorthodox position, but ack yourself this: the government in the 60's initiated a "War on Poverty" with the stated goal of eradicating poverty. Today we have more poverty then ever, despite rapidly growing wealth. Clearly something is not working. Government welfare is part of the problem, not the solution.

    1. Re:Welfare is bad by binarybits · · Score: 1

      This is just what you think. There many examples where you see the opposite. One example is healthcare that in the US costs 11% of BNP and the results (life expectancy) is worse than many european countries which spend 8% of their BNP on healthcare.

      That's a very broad statistic, and is all but meaningless without details. Keep in mind that the US has among the best health care systems in the world, so we may pay extra for that. Also, the health care industry isn't really a free market. The government has regulated it so much that it's hard to say what it would be like today if it had been allowed to take its course.

      It's better to give 10 Billion to the 10% poorest people on earth than to give Bill Gates an extra 10 Billon. There are a lot of human resources wasted because of poverty.

      I see this basically as a moral issue. No matter how much you'd like to give that money to the poor, it's not yours to give. It belongs to Bill, and he has a right to do with it as he pleases.

      Now in fact, he can't possibly spend it all, so much of it probably will go to others. But that doesn't justify Robin Hood-style theivery. A good goal does not justify bad means.

      In addition, taxing the rich and giving it to the poor hurts the economy in the long run. Economic growth comes from capital aquisition, and wages can only go up if productivity rises. So if we take away everyones' wealth and give it to the poor, there will be less investment, which means slower growth.


      I think the optimal society is capitalism moderated by strong giverment.

      I would argue that's a contradication in terms. A more accurate word for that system is called "fascism:" a moderately free market with massive doses of government control. The best system is capitalism without adjectives. The government should limit itself to its core function of protecting individuals from aggression, and let the market work its magic. In the long run this benefits everyone, the rich and poor alike.

    2. Re:Welfare is bad by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Well, that's a good argument that the approach used in the War on Poverty wasn't completely successful. Some of the blame for this goes to a bunch of presidents that cut back on anything that supported personal growth (e.g. Head Start). And another part is the organizations tend to act so as to perpetuate themselves.
      That doesn't mean that welfare is bad. But it does open up the question.

      Do you feel that only the corporations deserve government subsidy?

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re:Welfare is bad by LordBhaal · · Score: 1
      the government in the 60's initiated a "War on Poverty" with the stated goal of eradicating poverty

      Yeah, but they did that with a 'War On Drugs' too, didn't they? War generally isn't a good way to solve your social problems, unless you're going to use the Carthage solution, kill EVERYONE, raze the city, sow the ground with salt (stops those earth-melded vampires from getting back up)

      Not many people are willing to use that solution these days, and the US stops anyone but the US who tries.

      So long as you live in a Capitalist society, private industry has no incentive to eliminate unemployment, as unemployment is used as a threat to keep workers in line. All that'll really happen is that benefits will keep dropping, which saves cash, and makes people more desperate to get jobs, so Corporations can then lower working conditions, and the whole thing is a nasty downward spiral. Eventually society crublems into violence as desperate people steal what they need, until the state is forced to step in, instituting a Welfare system again.

      Welfare and Unemployment aren't going to go away until Capitalism does. That's no a magic solution either, but it's a good start.

  177. Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by binarybits · · Score: 1

    So long as you live in a Capitalist society, private industry has no incentive to eliminate unemployment, as unemployment is used as a threat to keep workers in line.

    Um... "private industry" is not a single monolithic organization. Individual companies will hire qualified workers and pay them enough to hold on to them. Different companies compete to hold those workers, and offer to pay them more to attract them. So you're just wrong: private industry does not cause unemployment. In fact, right now, the unemployment rate is practically zero. The 5% who are not working are mostly between jobs or are seasonal workers. Anyone with any skills at all has no trouble finding a job.

    What causes the unemployment is primarily the government. Things like minimum wages, Welfare, labor regulations, etc. Without these, the markmet would adjust so that pretty much anyone could get a job and support himself. If you don't believe me, ask yourself why almost everyone gets payed more than the minimum wage? Has the "downward spiral" not completed yet? Wages are currently increasing.

    So I think you're just confused. Without capitalism, we would all be back to the middle ages, working at manual labor tasks and giving our meager surpluses to our fuedal lords. Capitalism has liberated the common man.

    1. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by binarybits · · Score: 1

      Yeah, right. So why are all these 30-40 year old geeks with impressive resume's getting ditched for 20 year olds, and settling for cruddy little jobs instead?

      Some do, some don't. What's your point? If the 30 and 40 year olds let their skills stagnate, are you saying the corporation has an obligation to keep giving them raises and promotions just for existing? The older geeks have things the younger geeks don't: more industry experience, better judgement, a wider perspective on new technologies. Younger geeks have different advantages, but in either case, the corporation pays people what their skill command on the market. If the young geek makes the company more money, then they should be paid more, no?

      If humanity were all alike, and all equally good at a job, everybody would be getting the minimum wage (and we'd probably have been hived by now)

      I suggest you study economics. You just got done saying that companies bid up the prices of the higher-skilled workers. Why wouldn't the same process happen for the lower-skilled ones? The fact is, that's what happens. If an employee is making a lot more for his company than he is being paid, a competing company will offer him more to come work for them. This applies to burger flippers as well as CEO's. If the going rate for burger flippers was $1, restaurants would find they could attract the best people by offering $1.50. Then the compeition would see they are losing workers and offer $2. This will go on until the per-hour profit due to one worker is approximately equal to that worker's pay.

      I assume you have at least some knowledge of economics, so I find it strange that you'd take this position. No one argues that this occurs in any other market. Every market has a system of supply and demand, and the market price is determined by these forces. This is a simplification in some cases, but it does decribe approximately how things work. Thus a free market in labor would not lead to the price of labor dropping to zero and more than the price of soybeans would drop to zero. Companies compete for employees just as they compete for raw materials. And no one pretends that raw materials will be "exploited" without minimum prices for those. The same economic laws apply.

      Can you think of a better Feudal architecture than the modern Corporation? And how much is the difference betweent the actual value of your work, and what you get paid?

      That's just nonsense. Today's "serfs" make enourmously more money than any feudal serf, have much better working conditions, and a whole lot more freedom. Anyone in America is free to leave his job and seek another. There's nothing feudal about it.

      As for the "actual value of my work," how can I determine that besides looking at how much other people are willing to pay for it? If no one will pay me more than $2 an hour, then on what basis do you claim that it is worth more? Labor does not have intrinsic value. It is only given value by those who value it. If I choose to sell my labor, that means I value the money more than my labor. And whoever buys it values my labor more than the money. There is no such thing as an "actual value," independent of who is recieving the benefits of that labor.

    2. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by binarybits · · Score: 1

      If you think that almost everyone earns more than the minimum wage (or even the minimum wage) then either you live in a different city than I currently do

      This is probably the case. I live in Minnesota, and I see signs at the local fast food joints about starting wages averaging $7 an hour. Anyone with even minimal skills can work at a fast food place. Certainly some people have such minimal skills that they make less than $6/hour, but not many, and not for long if they work at improving those skills. It might be different in other states, but that's how it is here.

      Before the factories came in there was almost no unemployment.

      And a lousy standard of living. The reason that there was no unemployment was that everyone lived on a farm, and had to put in 60 hour weeks just to grow enough food to support their families. If you went out back and milked the cows, that made you "employed." I'd say the factories were a big improvement.

      When computers came in, the skills needed started shifting quickly, and many skilled people suddenly (well, over a period of about 10 years) became unskilled.

      Some people did, some didn't. Certainly some people have had to learn new skills, but I don't think it is nearly as difficult as you seem to think. And even a relatively unskilled person can survive at one of the large number of relatively low-skilled jobs paying $7-$9 an hour. No it's not fun, but it's a start.

      The obvious way out is to institute on-the-job training, but without generous tax credits this won't happen...

      Are you saying that most people are so poor that they can't afford to get training without help? I find this hard to believe. Yes, college is expensive, but there are lots of community collges, techncal schools, self-help books, and many employers *do* provide training, even to their unskilled workers. I question your doom-and-gloom outlook. The sky is not falling.

      And stock speculators cause the companies to focus on quarter-to-quarter profits, with the strong desire that each quarter be higher than the last.

      If this is true, then these speculators will drive the company into the ground, they will lose their money, and wiser speculators will be around next time. The stock market has some of the brightest people in the country. Do you seriously think that they are all so stupid as to focus only on the next quarter and ignore the long-term damage they are doing? Most of them are going to keep the stock for more than a few weeks, and even if not, they still are going to have to find someone to buy the now-crippled company.

      So no, capitalism is not inherently unstable, people are not helpless, managers are not stupid, and the poor are not doomed to remain that way forever. I guess I'm a lot more optimistic than you.

    3. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by binarybits · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, I guess you don't think 8 million unemployed adults is much? It's convenient they use percentages since it always sounds like so much less than it really is.

      Depends what they are doing. I doubt very few of them have been out looking for jobs for months. Many of them have either just lost their jobs, or have decided not to seriously look for a new job for a while. I could be wrong. But I do know that at least in this part of the company jobs are plentiful and they pay much better than the minimum wage. Other parts of the country may be different. I don't know.

      Corporations need to keep making profits, and they do this through dropping the cost of their production.

      Um, yeah. So? That's the whole point of production: making things for as little effort as possible. Would you rather they try to find the most expensive way to produce things? What would that accomplish?

      Now, common sense will tell you these corporations will need people to buy their goods.

      And? Common sense tells me that people need to buy those goods. It's called trade. It's good.

      Common sense will tell you we are going to run out of natural resources soon.

      No it doesn't. We are constantly finding new sources of natural resources. The earth is a very big ball of rock. you can bet there's a lot of useful material in it.

      Common sense will tell you are ecosystem is being screwed up.

      A little bit. Certainly not as much as greens will have you believe. They were predicting global ecological collapse by the millenium back in the seventies. That hasn't happened, now, has it? I still see flowers and trees and birds outside my window. Doesn't look too bad to me.

      The corporations are not human beings, they are faceless profit seeking vultures.

      No, they are human beings. They're employees, managers, and stockholders. And yes they're profit-seeking. That's a good thing. Greed is what made this country great. You know why I get up and go to work in the morning? Greed. I like to eat. I like to buy myself new toys. I like to have a place to live. I'm greedy.

      Someone who was completely ungreedy would starve to death in the streets. Greed is what makes the economy go. It's what drives people to create, to produce, to learn and grow. Without it, we'd still all be in our caves.

      Another thing, what do you think about corporate welfare?

      I think it's disgusting. You're the second person who's brought that up. What is up with that? Are you so accepting of government largess that you assume that anyone is against handouts to the poor must like handouts for the rich? I don't think anyone should get taxpayer-financed handouts.

      Why do all right-wing capitalists sound like brainwashed cult members?

      Um, read your own post. Corporations are not evil. They are not the great satan. They are not out to get you. They are an important part of the modern economy, and they help us produce the great wealth we now enjoy. They are mad up of individuals like you and me, trying to make a profit like you and me. That's life. It's a good thing. Get over it.

    4. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by binarybits · · Score: 1

      I'm appalled by your complete lack of understanding of economic principles:

      Any evidence at all for that?

      No, but common sense tells you that at least some of those people are. The unemployment rate has never been lower than about 3%, even at the peak of an economic boom. It's possible that that's the evil employers exploiting the workers, but it also might just be that there's always a certain amount of time between jobs, and so there's always a few unemployed folks.

      As for other regions of the country, you may be right that I'm lucky to live where I do. I'm not going to argue with that.

      The problem is, companies are moving to places that offer cheaper labor. From there, they'll move to places that offer even cheaper labor. Well, if no company is paying their workers enough to buy their own products, how the hell o they plan to actually sell something?

      What about that "cheap" labor? Would you rather we kept all the jobs here and let foreign workers be even poorer? Third world countries are willing to work for less because they are poorer than us. By what right do you deny them jobs just because you want to make sure your wages don't go down?

      The last sentence above is so wrong I don't even know where to start. This is the whole point of a market. If everyones' income goes down, then product prices go down. Things balance. Are you seriously telling be that the result of capitalism would be that every corporation will have lots of surplus goods and all the workers will have no money, and then everyone will starve? Have you ever opened an economics book? That's absurd.

      Petroleum.

      As I understand it we've got about 50 years worth left. And as we start to hit that limit, prices will rise and people will switch to alternatives.

      Genetic diversity.

      Possibly a problem, definitely a crisis

      Drinkable water. Arable land. Breathable air.

      Not sure i see your point here. I have enough. And it doesn't seem to be going away. Others may not, but that's hardly the evil corporations' fault. If anything, they help that problem by finding new and better ways to filter water, and clean the air.

      Furthermore, you've got that in the reverse order. Corps are ruled by 1) a small group of stockholders 2) Management 3) finally, a large number of faceless individual employees. Of whom I am one, so don't even try to tell me I don't know what I'm talking about. I can't even change policy in my own group to any measurable degree. Furthermore, the first two groups are driven almost solely by the stock price of the company, and the first group only by the short-term stock price. If the price starts to go down, they'll just bail out and buy a different company. Which is why the people who make decisions in this country don't give a rat's ass about the long-term view, and why we're going downhill as fast as we are.

      Again, you obviously have no clue about economics. No one can be sure when a stock is "about to plummet." Even if they did, why would someone else buy it if they knew it? And if every company is self-destructing, how come their stock prices keep going up?

    5. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by binarybits · · Score: 1

      What can I say? You're hysterical ranting doesn't warrant response. I guess you're so sure you're right, you don't even need to provide anything to prove it. I guess I'm just too caught up in my right-wing fantasies to see the beauty of your left-wind delusions.

    6. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by HiThere · · Score: 1

      If you think that almost everyone earns more than the minimum wage (or even the minimum wage) then either you live in a different city than I currently do (some cities are better than others, or at least appear to be [I've never wanted to conduct a personal investigation of what it was like to be poor there]), or you look at the world with different eyes than I do. Another possibility.

      Personally, I have always felt that unemployment was caused by the structure of the society. Population pressures also play a part. Before the factories came in there was almost no unemployment. When computers came in, the skills needed started shifting quickly, and many skilled people suddenly (well, over a period of about 10 years) became unskilled. And the path from unskilled jobs to skilled jobs became blocked. When managers are those who majored in management on college, and the intermediate skilled jobs are removed (well, actually only severly reduced). Then a society is headed for social unrest and unemploymnet.

      The obvious way out is to institute on-the-job training, but without generous tax credits this won't happen, because the companies are not charitable institutions. Any of them. This includes the churches...they want to increase their congregation, and to pile up political points that they can use to their advantage.

      And stock speculators cause the companies to focus on quarter-to-quarter profits, with the strong desire that each quarter be higher than the last. This can't be maintained, so after they have eaten all of the seed corn, the stocks crash. And temporary managers are specialists (recovery experts, profit maximizers, etc.) at PART of the job of being a manager. So they jump from company to company and no one is watching the long term results.

      YUCK! This is dangerous! And it's structural, flow of control stuff. Forget the idiology, and look at the program!

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    7. Re:Capitalism doesn't cause unemployment by LordBhaal · · Score: 1
      'Private Industry' obviously isn't a single monolithic organisation. Your first paragraph answers your question in the second.

      Anyone with any skills at all has no trouble finding a job

      Yeah, right. So why are all these 30-40 year old geeks with impressive resume's getting ditched for 20 year olds, and settling for cruddy little jobs instead?

      ask yourself why almost everyone gets payed more than the minimum wage

      If humanity were all alike, and all equally good at a job, everybody would be getting the minimum wage (and we'd probably have been hived by now)

      But some people are naturally better than the average, and companies will try to hire them rather than the common person. Thus a supply/demand thing happens, so these people get higher wages as companies fight to get a hold of them. This naturally has a follow on effect to those not quite so good, and so on, as companies who don't win fight over who's left.

      And I'm not confused, but my paradigm is obviously different to yours.

      ...meager surpluses to our fuedal lords

      Can you think of a better Feudal architecture than the modern Corporation? And how much is the difference betweent the actual value of your work, and what you get paid?

      Think what you want BinaryBits, it's your life afterall, just make sure you're thinking and not blindly following (not to imply anything here)

  178. Nope by binarybits · · Score: 1

    Do you feel that only the corporations deserve government subsidy?

    I don't think anyone deserves subsidies. I'd cut back corporate welfare just as quickly as social welfare. I find it interesting that everyone assumes that if you are against government subsidies for the poor, then you must be in favor of government subsidies for the rich. That's nonsense. I don't think the government should subsidize anyone.

  179. 72 lb's of PU is not that much by Serfer · · Score: 2

    you're forgetting that PU is an EXTREMELY dense element. 72 pounds of it is hardly anything

  180. primordial black holes by falser · · Score: 1

    As I remember reading the earth supposedly collided with a primordial black hole (mass of about a mountain) in 1904, and the results were merely less than a very week nuclear explosion, blew down a few miles of trees. Nobody knew what it was until 30 years later or so.

    So I'm not too worried about a black hole with the mass of a few sub-atomic particles.

  181. Re:As long as they tell me before they try it out. by Rauber · · Score: 1

    What do you think they just did?

  182. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by Neil+Rubin · · Score: 1
    The forces acting on diffrent parts of your body would be diffrent. this is why planets rotate (I think).

    I'm afraid not. This fact does cause things like the Earth's ocean tides, but it does not account for planetary rotation. The forces from the sun, say, that would cause a perfectly rigid planet to rotate in one direction are exactly cancelled by the forces that would cause it to rotate in the other. Since no body is perfectly rigid, these tidal forces actually do slowly change to rate of rotation to bring it closer to once an orbit.

    In fact though, most planets and moons rotate much faster than this, and the reason is that the dust and gas that they formed out of happened to have a non-zero angular momentum. Of course this angular momentum will also change over time as the result of collisions with other bodies.

  183. Re:cosmic ray energies by Neil+Rubin · · Score: 5
    Actually, a very small number of cosmic rays have been observed above 10^8 TeV (10^20 eV). A total of about 9 events have been observed, by several different experiments, with energies above the so-called GKZ cutoff of 2.5*10^7 TeV. This number of events corresponds to a few cosmic rays above that energy per square kilometer of the Earth's atmosphere per century, or roughly 10^16 of these events in the history of the Earth, if my math is correct.

    The question of exactly where all of these insanely high energy particle come from is a deep mystery. Proposed answers include: Gamma Ray Bursts, Active Galactic Nuclei, interactions involving Magnetic Monopoles or Cosmic Strings, the decays of super-massive relics from the big bang, etc. For more info on these rare events, see the Pierre Auger Observatory website at www.auger.org.

    Now 2.5*10^7 TeV sounds like an incredible ammount of energy compared to the .1 TeV/nucleon of RHIC, but since the cosmic rays are hitting essentially stationary nuclei in the Earth's atmosphere as opposed to the head-on collisions of RHIC, most of the energy just goes into the kinetic energy of the collision debris rather than into producing interesting physics. The relevant figure is the center of mass energy of the cosmic ray and target nucleus system. It turns out that this is equal to sqrt(2*m*E), where m is the mass of the target and E is the mass of the cosmic ray. Supposing that the target is a Nitrogen nucleus, we get sqrt(2*.014 TeV*2.5*10^7 TeV) or roughly 10^6 TeV. The corresponding figure for RHIC 2*(200 nucleons)*(100 GeV/nucleon)=4*10^4 TeV. The cosmic ray events win, but only by a bit more than an order of magnitude. (Note that this is all very much "back of the napkin" calculation, and may not be exactly right, but it's close.)

    That was fun, but what does it all mean? Well, from the RHIC documentation, I figure that RHIC will have roughly 10^15 bunch crossings in each full year of collision running. Assuming that there is less than one collision per beam crossing (it makes it much easier to figure out what's going on in each collision), RHIC will produce an order of magnitude fewer collisions, with an order of magnitude lower energy density than these cosmic rays that bombard the Earth naturally. While a more careful analysis may change some of these numbers by a bit, it seems pretty unlikely that RHIC will destroy the Earth, when all of these cosmic ray collisions obviously haven't.

  184. No bright side by dxkelly · · Score: 1

    No, they'll shoot a copy of NT into space where
    some alien will pick it up and infect his home
    planet.

  185. Re:Appocalypse Now by ralphclark · · Score: 1

    In Arthur C Clarke's final sequel to 2001:A Space Odyssey he suggests (with tongue firmly in cheek) that most observed supernovae are caused by industrial accidents like this; specifically, accelerator experiments that reach the energy density threshold which releases the zero point energy of the vacuum. This is supposed to cause inflation of a new spacetime domain (i.e. create a baby universe).

    The same theme was explored, with non-catastrophic results, in Greg Benford's Cosm. IIRC, in that book the collider used was the same one at Brookhaven mentioned in the above article.

    Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
    Thought exists only as an abstraction

  186. Re:Black holes don't "suck" by ralphclark · · Score: 1

    [Black holes]... *do* have gravitational attraction, of course, but we're talking about a miniscule mass. Any singularity with this mass will be indescribably small, and even if it survives Hawking radiation it will only rarely hit a proton or electron just right to effect capture. I'm reminded of Rutherford's experiments shooting electrons at gold foil -- and in that case the few bounces where due to an electrostatic force many orders of magnitude stronger than gravity.

    You're wrong about that because the analogy that guides you is inappropriate.

    The intensity of an unshielded electromagnetic field does, like gravity, fall off in proportion to the square of the distance from the source.

    However the gold nuclei at which Rutherford was firing his helium nuclei were not unshielded. The repulsive effect of the target protons was attenuated by the enveloping electron cloud (or 'shell' as he saw it). An alpha particle completely outside of the electron cloud would, on average, feel no net repulsion at all.

    Gravity is not polar and there is no (known) means of shielding it. Consequently, any small black hole exerts a small but finite attaction upon every particle in the universe; and for any particle whose relative motion does not exceed the escape velocity for the gravitational field at its own position, it is only a matter of time before its centre of mass coincides with that of the black hole.

    Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
    Thought exists only as an abstraction

  187. Black holes aren't the problem by ralphclark · · Score: 1

    I'm really not worried about the risk posed by a microscopic black hole burning out in a tiny flash of gamma radiation lasting a millionth of a second.

    I am however concerned about what happens when these colliders finally reach what they call the 'Grand Unification' energy.

    A popular suite of cosmological theories has it that at certain very high temperatures, spacetime flips over into other metastable states in which the four physical forces attain the same values and become merged. The highest of these temperatures corresponds to the earliest epoch of the big bang, in which conditions it is thought that there is only one physical force.

    If that wasn't bad enough, the inflationary theories suggest that at some critical point during this process the affected volume of spacetime undergoes a runaway expansion or 'inflation' which creates matter out of nothing just like droplets of moisture condensing out of humid air, as it expands and cools.

    This is supposedly how our own Universe formed from an infinitesimal speck of hot nothingness. So, if we do ever manage to recreate in our colliders the energy density that prevailed at time T=0, it's quite possible that mini black holes will be the least of our worries. What would be the local effect of a new big bang in an Earthbound collider?

    In his novel Cosm, Gregory Benford suggests that all Universes are created this way, like children born from a parent. That even our own universe was caused by someone's physics experiment (and that someone isn't necessarily much more technologically advanced then we are).

    He also suggests that creating a baby universe in this way won't hurt. In his story, the baby was connected to the parent via a relatively big but stable wormhole, and its expansion did not disturb our local spacetime.

    That was just a story device though. Wormholes are generally thought to be both very small and also hightly unstable (i.e. short lived).

    What would be the energy release from a collapsing wormhole pinched off from a baby universe even if the universe's expansion didn't itself disturb the local domain?

    Is somebody going to tell us or do we have to do the experiment?

    As a lot of people have mentioned in jest, including (elsewhere) Arthur C Clarke, maybe this is why you don't see too many other advanced civilisations out there cluttering up the airwaves. The final experiment is just too easy to do.

    Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
    Thought exists only as an abstraction

    1. Re:Black holes aren't the problem by DirkGently · · Score: 1

      Have you read any David Brin? I assume a fellow like you has. But if not, his collection of short stories titled "Otherness" has a good bit in it about accidental universe creation. A good bit of fiction. I recomend.

      Dirk

      --

      I keep trying to pick fights, but I can't shake this Excellent karma.

  188. Re:Black holes don't "suck" by ralphclark · · Score: 1

    I thought two particles, gravitons and anti-gravitons, are expected to exist, each with an opposite gravitational "pole". The existence of these quantum particles is vital for exotic matter (and consequently, fun things like exploiting wormholes and warp drives). Right?

    Well now, that would be nice. However, neither exotic matter nor wormholes nor warp drives are known to exist. Also, there is no comprehensive gravitational theory, whether GR or QM-based, which requires antigravitons and which has also been backed up by observational data.

    So for the moment at least, the things of which you speak belong solely to the domain of science fiction. Unfortunately.
    Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
    Thought exists only as an abstraction

  189. Re:Larry Niven Stories... by smileyy · · Score: 1

    Yes, it was Niven, in a story called "The Hole Man". It's available in the collection "N Space". The person in question died due to peritonitis from the tidal effects of a molecule-sized black hole passing through him.

    I'm not sure how I feel about the words "cheap pulp science fiction" and "Larry Niven" being discussed in the same topic. Granted, not everything he's written has been great, but at the same time, some of it has been.

    --
    pooptruck
  190. Re:Igniting the Atmosphere by Detritus · · Score: 2
    In any case, your description of the plutonium risk is a massive exaggeration. Plutonium is primarily dangerous if you breath it in as dust after managing to survive the atomic explosion that spread it around in the first place. If you do that, it is about the most toxic substance known to man - it will settle into your bones and just start spawning cancers.

    Plutonium is not the most toxic substance known to man. There are many biological toxins that are much more dangerous. There is a paper on the subject here, written by scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It contains actual scientific facts, not eco-loonie propaganda as propagated by Helen Caldicott and Karl Grossman.

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  191. Wouldn't it be interesting............ by Sevn · · Score: 1

    If we haven't met face to face with other
    intelligent beings because they made one of
    these things first. ;) This could be the
    scientific achievment that starts the
    endgame. Spooky eh?

    --
    For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
  192. How I learned to stop worrying, and love the bomb. by mrsam · · Score: 1

    Or was that some kind of Cobalt bomb or something? It was actually called "Cobalt Sodium G", and it was a part of the Doomsday Device that the Russians were building in the 1960s...
    --

  193. Re: Seriousness of the UK "Quality Press" by Submarine · · Score: 1

    My recent experiences with the UK's alleged quality press is
    that it has gone the way of the British popular press: tabloid
    journalism full of sensationnalism, exaggerations and the like.

    Take this article with a pinch of salt. It wouldn't be surprising
    if they had grossly distorted what the scientists have said.

  194. cosmic ray energies by rillian · · Score: 1

    How do collisions with an energy greater than the equivalent of two gold nuclei bumping into each other at 99.9% of the speed of light at an angle of 180 degrees occur naturally? Please enlighten me, as I know very little about cosmic radiation.

    I don't either, really, but the energies of some cosmic rays are just insane. The introduction to the RHIC documentation gives an upper bound for the beam energies of 100 GeV/nucleon. Cosmic rays have been seen with energies in excess of 100TeV (1000 times larger).

    These are very rare, of course, but we certainly see several every year. This is why studying cosmic rays is still a useful thing, even though we have these amazing accelerators. :)

  195. Re:Big Bang? by SeanCier · · Score: 3

    Why the hell do they want to recreate the creation of the universe anyway?

    They're not trying to create a new big bang; there's not even a prevailing theory on 'why' the big bang happened in the first place, or what took place in the first (miniscule) fraction of a second. However, a lot of theories, both cosmological models and GUTs (Grand Unified Theories) depend on what happened in the high-energy conditions that existed only in that first second, during which -- for instance -- our basic forces congealed out of the morass. So, recreate the high-energy conditions, and you can investigate the theories experimentally.

    That said, recreating big bang conditions isn't even the primary aim of most accelerators; the high-energy conditions required to isolate particles simply happen to be the exception rather than the rule in the universe today, while the big bang was one circumstance in which they were the rule.

    -spc

  196. Galactic Darwin Award by Oliver+Lineham · · Score: 1

    Well! I'd just like to add that IF the world does disappear in a puff of nothingness, then at the VERY least we should get nominated for THE GALACTIC DARWIN AWARD.

    For service to the evolution of beings everywhere..

    --
    -- mind over pixel
  197. Re:Big Bang? by WebFetus · · Score: 1

    Does this mean he's no longer the 'Unquestioned' lord of the internet? I've been waiting for someone to take him down - it seemed so easy. Just question him...

    --
    ...suckling from the sweet amnion of life...
  198. Re:"Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by WebFetus · · Score: 1

    Read David Brin's "Earth". A good book that involves the life and times of Earth in the early 21st century. Also explains fairly well synthetic black holes, how they're contained, and a great new science called 'Cavitronics'.
    It also has an interesting theory (that I've seen in other science fiction) on the creation of the universe.

    --
    ...suckling from the sweet amnion of life...
  199. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by dirty · · Score: 1

    Yes, time slows down, when you compare what you experienced to what the outside world experienced. You would only notice the change in time if you were able to exit the black hole, and check out the universe. You'd notice time passed a lot for them, but little for you. In short, you'd still be dead quickly, even though to people on mars it would appear to be an eternity.

    --

    -matt
  200. Re:Big Bang? by palantir · · Score: 1

    I think they feel that this Universe is much too much like Windoze. It's time to reformat the disk and re-install.

  201. Re:Where would chain reaction energy come from? by choo · · Score: 1

    In the case of a nuclear explosion, energy is released because the resulting nuclei have less binding energy than the original nuclei.

    If nuclei are ripped into their constituent quarks, it seems that energy would be required (rather than released) to do so.

  202. Where would chain reaction energy come from? by choo · · Score: 2

    The article reports that the 'strangelets' produced may set off a chain reaction, converting everything it comes into contact with into strange matter. But it seems that a lot of energy will be required to break up nuclei into its constituent quarks (?). But where would the energy for a such chain reaction come from? After all energy has to be conserved e.g. colliders require very large amounts of energy to accelerate atoms to very high speeds to break them up in the first place.

    But the article just says that matter may be transformed into 'more strange matter'. What does this actually mean?

    1. Re:Where would chain reaction energy come from? by LordBhaal · · Score: 1
      Where does this energy come from?!? Wow, this must be magic!


      It IS magic! Everything is magic! This computer is magic. I push 'button' on a 'keyboard' and letters appear on a 'monitor' which mystically get sent to 'slashdot' and can be viewed upon the 'monitors' of millions of other people on their 'computers'


      And what's a phone but a (what's the word for distance voice communication, not telepathy, but...?, that word) device?


      Light switch: you flick a 'switch' on a wall, and suddenly the whole room is illuminated. how? magic.

      (and just to be pedantic) how does a knife actually cut things? Sure, the sharpened edge can be viewed as a force multiplier, but how?


      Magic is fun. Fireball: requirements, 1 molotov cocktail, 1 lighter.


      tee hee hee

  203. screw wood... by Nima · · Score: 1

    I am going to buy stove that runs only on human energy..

    can take the chance of wood.. There is all sorts of *stuff* in that wood stuff...

    1. Re:screw wood... by SEWilco · · Score: 1

      You're going to power a stove by dropping humans into a black hole?

    2. Re:screw wood... by TeChYMaN · · Score: 1

      HAHAHAHAHA now thatmade me crack up.... moderators PLEASE give him a +5 here he deserves it!

      -TeChY

    3. Re:screw wood... by Gawyn · · Score: 1

      Natural resources are scarce, third-world babies ain't. You gotta burn something! J/K

      ~Gawyn~

  204. Re:Igniting the Atmosphere by sammy+baby · · Score: 1
    Hear hear. I'm glad that there are still some critical readers left on Slashdot.

    By the way, for a good summary of the technology involved in producing the Cassini probe (and why you shouldn't panic about the plutonium on board), check out this letter on Brill's Content. It was written (by a friend - go Chris go!) in reaction to one of the many paranoia inducing articles that's been circulating about the probe.

  205. Re:Why it's not a problem by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Hey, we're talking about a two atom sized black hole. When it evaporated it would probably need to be in a test chamber to be detected. (I haven't calculated this, but that's my first estimate.)

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  206. Re:"Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Or a garbage incinerator? (Once it got large enough you could get up to ?50?% of the total energy off as em radiation. Talk about a spaceheater!)

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  207. Re:"Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Well, you'd probably need to put it in orbit. That should be safe enough... if the containment failed, then you'd have a REALLY micrometeorite in orbit. I doubt that it would slow down before evaporating unless you had put most of a planet into it, and with total conversion (close order of, anyway) you could certainly afford to expand the orbit as it gained weight. Of course, the microwave downlink for power transmission might be a tad controversial.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  208. Re:Conservation of energy by Tim+C · · Score: 1

    No, conservation of energy must be obeed at the quantum level too, although you can "cheat" a little. Heisenberg's uncertaintity principle states that conservation of energy can be violated, but that the amount of time for which this surplus energy can exist is inversely proporional to the amount of energy (the exact relationship escapes me, but it's something like t=(hbar)/E, where t is time, E is energy and (hbar) is Planck's constant over 2*pi).

    Therefore, 0 energy can exist forever (t goes to infinity), an infinite amount of energy can exist for zero time, and everything else falls somewhere inbetween.

    On a related matter, I remember reading a couple of years ago that the total energy of the universe is, in fact, zero (counting potential energy as being negative, as always). So, there is no violation of conservation of energy, and the universe has every right to exist for as long as it wants....

    Tim

    Getting back into Physics mode :o)

  209. Re:Conservation of energy by Tim+C · · Score: 1

    I'd go with the duration of the universe being undefined - mostly because it is :o)

    Tim

  210. Cosm and the like by cs · · Score: 1

    Also "Forever Peace" by Joe Haldeman.

    --
    Cameron Simpson, DoD#743 cs@cskk.id.au http://www.cskk.ezoshosting.com/cs/
  211. Thank God! by Skinka · · Score: 1

    Finally something to replace Y2K in the end-of-the-world-is-here arena!

  212. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by linuxghoul · · Score: 1

    How 'bout having a slashdot poll on the matter?

    ;)

    --
    Sigura Non Grata
  213. Looking on the bright side... by orcrist · · Score: 1

    ...if this does destroy the world, the end of the Microsoft monopoly will be assured.

    or will it?

    chris

    --
    San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
  214. *London* by wangi · · Score: 1

    "London Sunday Times" *cough* - what's that then?

    1. Re:*London* by wangi · · Score: 1

      Well the article is in the electronic edition...

    2. Re:*London* by The_Jazzman · · Score: 1

      It's the London issue of the Sunday Times.

    3. Re:*London* by The_Jazzman · · Score: 1

      Your point being ? I'm not certain, but it was probably seen in the paper (that is the one made out of) by someone in London and submitted.

  215. Re:dusting the atmosphere by TWR · · Score: 2
    The story is "Solution Unsatisfactory" by Robert Heinlein. You can find it reprinted in "Expanded Universe."

    You've got the details mostly right. It discusses using a radioactive dust as a weapon (probably since when the story was written, it was believed "impossible" to build an ICBM). Planes would "dust" cities to destroy them. Different dusts would have different strengths.

    After ending WW II using the dust, every country in the world is supposed to turn its planes over to the UN. Whenthe stand-in for the Soviet Union turns in their planes, they dust the US instead. Moscow is then destroyed, and Manning (the head of the program) becomes world dictator.

    There's a lot more, but just get a copy of the story. It's a good read.

    -jon

    --

    Remember Amalek.

  216. Re:Appocalypse Now by kijiki · · Score: 1

    You need an excuse to do some serious partying?

  217. Re:Big Bang? by kijiki · · Score: 1

    Better go read about how a transistor works before you start posting. Classical physics says nothing about electron "holes"

  218. Look on the bright side by CyberPuppet · · Score: 1

    Look on the bright side.. at least it would destroy Microsoft once and for all :)

    --
    So, you've got an O:Line? That dont impress me much du du da du.
  219. RHIC FAQ for /.'ers by SteveAdler · · Score: 1

    I will, in time, write up an article on the RHIC startup, but for now, I've whipped up a quick FAQ for those of you interested in learning a bit about the collider from some one on the inside. That's me. By the way, we are oranizing a conference titled Open Source/Open Science, on the use of open source in science. So if you guys want to see the RHIC for your selves, then you are welcome to come to BNL, hear about Open Source and see the collider and its detectors! [A shamless plug by one of the conference organizers. :) ]

  220. Re:The End of the World! Microsoft(TM) will save u by SteveAdler · · Score: 1

    Sorry, we use Linux in one form or other in all experiments at RHIC. Looks like were doomed!!!!

  221. I can see it now... by Randy+Rathbun · · Score: 1

    We are all gonna be watching TV some night and all the broadcasts will be interrupted by some bald kook with a naked cat saying, "I will turn this on unless you pay me ONE MILLION DOLLARS!"

    Mister programmer
    I got my hammer
    Gonna smash my smash my radio

  222. Ever wonder... by WareW01f · · Score: 1

    ...how much they don't tell us about? Still the thing is that where talking about scientists here, in the scientific community, if you say something can happen, but it's extremely unlikely, you're simply covering all of the bases. Unfortunatly, when Reporter X hears this, they proceed to "expose" this because people have a "right to know" (Or is that the newspaper has a "right to sell issues" I forget.)

    Of course this does not mean that I don't think that a bunch of scientists, that usually have little knowledge of what they're actually doing couldn't end up destroying the planet. I just have faith that if they fuck up it'll prolly be huge, with no way out. In which case there's nothing we can do anyway and so it's pointless to worry about.

    At least that's my 00000011. :)

  223. armageddon by Orion2o6 · · Score: 1

    save us bruce willis!

  224. A Collider in Hemos's brain? by TNN · · Score: 1

    Considering the amount of redundancy and lack of proof-reading in Hemos's headline there must be some embedded radioactivity up there!
    Hemos, what cell phone do you use?

  225. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by rueba · · Score: 1

    Do you have statistics to back that up? More specifically, do you think things would have been better without welfare? How? Just curious.....

    --
    The only reason all cover-ups appear to fail is that you never hear about the ones that succeed.
  226. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by rueba · · Score: 1

    "That national labs have better technology than the technology industry is probably the best indictment of how much taxation has hindered the development and spread of technology. If these companies didn't have to spend so much on taxes, accountants to calculate them, their support staff, and lawyers and their support staff, they could devote those funds to lowering costs or further research."

    Point well taken, but my understanding is that the National labs and agencies such as NASA can focus on research that would simply not be cost effective for the private sector. For example a company might find that it can take a man to Mars for 4 billion bucks, but realize they can only get
    1 billion dollars in revenue, and thus find the venture unprofitable. Same thing for high energy physics; it's useful but not economical for the private sector. Government agencies have no such constraints, and thus can investigate new technologies that are not yet ready for commercial
    application. Once the megabucks have been invested
    by the National Labs (at great financial loss) any marketable new technologies can then be developed by the commercial sector and mass produced.

    --
    The only reason all cover-ups appear to fail is that you never hear about the ones that succeed.
  227. What about... by Ellis-D · · Score: 0

    What about super mass where the atoms are just nutrons and have no nucleus?
    I ate my tag line.

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  228. Plan 9 from outer space... by C. · · Score: 1

    Wasn't it in that movie that aliens came to warn us we were about to ignite the whole Universe with our scientific experiments, or something like that?

    At last we can explain Area 51...

    --
    C.
    1. Re:Plan 9 from outer space... by voxlumania · · Score: 1

      Yes, in Plan 9 from Outer Space there was this fantasy substance called "solemenite". It allowed you to "explode sunlight particles" as the movie's cheesy alien explains:

      "Explode the sunlight here, gentlemen, and you explode the whole universe!"

      Of course, how could an alien race know that without exploding the sunlight (and thus, the universe) to begin with?

      "Your stupid minds...stupid! Stupid!!"

      --
      Politics today are so corrupt. Whoever raises the most money wins. Well, the American people are fed up, and they will
  229. BNL/RHIC makes an official reply to the article by decowski · · Score: 1

    Here is an official press-release from the director of BNL to the article - I am a PhD student doing my thesis work on RHIC, so I don't want it to blow up either... ;->

    cheers,
    patrick.

    BNL Media & Communications wrote:

    > The following statement was issued today by Brookhaven National Laboratory
    > in response to an article on RHIC published in yesterday's Sunday Times of
    > London. Please share it with others in your area who do not have access to
    > e-mail.
    > ***

    > Statement by John Marburger, Brookhaven Lab Director, On Consequences of
    > RHIC Operations
    > July 19, 1999

    > Yesterday, the Sunday Times of London published a story under the headline
    > "Big Bang Machine could destroy the Earth," with an accompanying editorial.
    > The story has its origins in a letter in the July 1999 issue of Scientific
    > American magazine, in which a prominent physicist describes a possible
    > scenario in which an exotic elementary particle transforms its
    > surroundings.

    > I am familiar with the issue of possible dire consequences of experiments
    > at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, which Brookhaven Lab is now
    > commissioning. These issues have been raised and examined by responsible
    > scientists who have concluded that there is no chance that any phenomenon
    > produced by RHIC will lead to disaster.

    > The amount of matter involved in the RHIC collisions is exceedingly small -
    > only a single pair of nuclei is involved in each collision. Our universe
    > would have to be extremely unstable in order for such a small amount of
    > energy to cause a large effect. On the contrary, the universe appears to
    > be quite stable against releases of much larger amounts of energy that
    > occur in astrophysical processes.

    > RHIC collisions will be within the spectrum of energies encompassed by
    > naturally occurring cosmic radiation. The earth and its companion objects
    > in our solar system have survived billions of years of cosmic ray
    > collisions with no evidence of the instabilities that have been the subject
    > of speculation in connection with RHIC.

    > I have asked experts in the relevant fields of physics to reduce to a
    > single comprehensive report the arguments that address the safety of each
    > of the speculative "disaster scenarios." I expect the report to be
    > completed well before RHIC produces the high-energy collisions necessary
    > for any of these scenarios. When the report is completed, it will be
    > broadly published and placed on the Laboratory's web site.

    > **************************************
    > BNL Media & Communications
    > pubaf@bnl.gov
    > 516-344-3174 or 2345 * Fax 516-344-3368
    > Brookhaven National Laboratory
    > Bldg. 134 PO Box 5000
    > Upton NY 11973
    > www.bnl.gov

    > **************************************


  230. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by LordBhaal · · Score: 1
    350 Million Pounds would put me a long way towards destroying most of humanity (preferrably in an ecologically sound manner, people are commonplace, environments aren't really) Conventiently, that would also solve most (not all) of our current social problems. Cunning or what?

    Come, join the Second Churce of Genocide.

  231. Re:Even a small black hole would be very bad. by ragnarokk · · Score: 1

    There is one small problem with your calculations: where in the world would the black hole get a million tons of mass? Even in the world of High Energy physics you can't just create mass, it has to come from somewhere. At most the scientists are going to be slinging around a few atoms of some of gold...last time I checked atoms of gold were not measured in tons so the mass isn't comming from there. And it sure isn't going to get that much mass by somehow converting the energy into mass. Here is some more High School physics:
    1 eV=1.602*10^-19 J
    100 GeV (100 billion eV)=1.602*10^-8 J
    E=mc^2
    1.602*10^-8J=m(3.00*10^8)^2
    m=1.78*10^-25 kg

    And that is if every shred of energy in the system is converted to mass.

    So, in total, we have less than a kilogram of mass avaliable to make a black hole. What kind of event horizon do you think this will create? I don't know the equation offhand but I would be willing to bet it would be *damn* small. As in sub-atomic, if that is even possible.

    And if we consider that black holes actually decrease in mass at a rate that is inversely proportional to their mass, then the only conclution that seems logical to me is that these tiny black holes will "evaporate" before they can do any damage, or really have any effect on anything. That is, if they are even created which is doubtful.

  232. Re:Even a small black hole would be very bad. by ragnarokk · · Score: 1

    Well, say you had a black hole out in deep space, where there really is very little to pull in. In that case then it might stop growing. As I understand it black holes actually shrink at a rate that is inversely proportional to their mass. That means that, theoreticaly, a black hole could completly vanish (or "evaporate") if it does not keep sucking in more matter.

    In the case of these tiny black holes that are under discussion they would have such a weak pull and tiny event horizon (point of no return, nothing escapes a black hole's pull once it has crossed the event horizon) that they would evaporate faster than they would pull in mass, and so they would vanish before hurting, or even effecting, much of anything.

    DISCLAIMER: IANAHEP (I Am Not A High Energy Physicst) and could be completly wrong.

  233. Funniest thing I've ever read... by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 2

    "In space, black holes are believed to generate intense gravitational fields that suck in all surrounding matter. The creation of one on Earth could be disastrous."

    Who'd a thunk it?

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    1. Re:Funniest thing I've ever read... by skajohan · · Score: 1
      If it's not disastrous, we just might end up with a really cool way to get rid of our garbage.

      Don't hate the media, become the media.

  234. How many conservation laws can you violate? by GaryW · · Score: 1

    Whoever came up with the idea that strange quarks can mysteriously transmute "everything they touch" into strange quarks needs to go back to high school. Here's a few of the conservation laws such a reaction would violate:

    1) Conservation of charge. The strange quark has charge -1/3e; "conversion" of any other quark besides the down and bottom (which have equal charge) would violate charge conservation which is known to be preserved in all interactions.

    2) Conservation of mass/energy. The strange quark has mass ~150MeV; up or down quarks (which compose nucleons) mass only 5 or 7 MeV respectively so any reaction producing a strange quark from an up or down requires massive additional energy (and so is not self-sustaining).

    3) Conservation of strangeness. Preserved in all but the weak interaction.

    So if strange quarks really are the King Midas of subatomic particles, they have to violate an awful lot of conservation principles. Sorry, it's not going to happen in our universe.

  235. see this month's Scientific American by end.org · · Score: 1


    In the july SA there are some letters to the editor about this very subject. The response to the letters spells out the arguments against this possiblity rather succintly.

    Here's the original article:
    http://acnsun10.rhic.bnl.gov/RHIC/index.html

    and the letters to the editor:
    http://www.scientificamerican.com/1999/0799issue /0799letters.html

  236. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by Yogger · · Score: 3

    well, as far as ways to go are, that wouldn't be to bad. I mean think how many people die in shootings, hit by a bus, car crashes, etc.
    No one knows their names and such, but if your the first person to die by such an odd event, i think it'd get written down and published a lot.

    (Standing in line to the afterlife)
    ME: Hey man, how'd you get here?
    Other: Hit by a bus, you?
    ME: First person ever known to be swallowed by a black hole.
    Other: What a way to go.

    -Yogger

  237. Actually, to wipe out JFK Jr. by The+Bastard · · Score: 2

    Think about it. Test fired on Friday, and creates
    some sort of space-time warp, plane comes into contact with it and *POOF*...gonner.


    It's possible...just not too probable
    .

    ----------------------------
    Dammit Jim...It's "U-N-I-X",

    1. Re:Actually, to wipe out JFK Jr. by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

      They already did it. It's called the Bermuda Triangle.
      heh

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  238. How in the world did this get published...? by barawn · · Score: 2

    Just to summarize a few things, the comments
    on /. pretty much just hit the mark - cosmic-ray
    interactions are ~ the same energy, so if this
    could happen, it would've happened.

    Also, the comment about a "black hole forming"
    seems to be psuedo-science crap - a 'miniature'
    black hole would not even have the gravitational
    field to draw anything *into* it - it would have
    to rely on chance interactions to grow larger,
    and considering that its Schwarzschild radius
    would be smaller than the known radius of a
    proton by *huge* amounts, I don't even know
    if it *is* possible for it to absorb anything.
    Also, as soon as it absorbed any particle, it
    would be unstable due to charge-angular momentum-
    mass limitation. The short answer: black holes
    aren't dangerous. Huge amounts of mass are
    dangerous. We don't have huge amounts of mass here.
    No danger.

    The 'strangelet' pair formation is curious.
    I don't know enough about subatomic physics/
    quark theory to actually know what this
    actually is, but stupid physics tells me that
    you can't just randomly break strangeness
    conservation, so instead of forming just
    strange matter, you'd need strange-antistrange
    pairs, and thus baryon-antibaryon pairs. Which
    means in order for these 'strangelets' to
    convert something to strange matter, the
    corresponding antiparticle would have to be
    present - i.e. strangelet + p + pbar ->
    strangelet + whatever the particle is with
    (ssd) rather than (uud). (or ssc, or sud, etc.)
    plus its antiparticle. Considering the vast
    baryon-antibaryon asymmetry (see any antimatter
    lying around? I didn't think so.) this isn't
    a danger at all.

    What I want to know is how this got published.
    Granted, I haven't much gotten into graduate
    physics yet, but this is really poor stuff at
    face value.

    Patrick

  239. BNL Press Release on RHIC by bholzm1 · · Score: 1

    Note: I don't work for the laboratory, although since I'm on one of the RHIC experiments, technically I am an employee.

    - Burt
    ------------------------------

    The following statement was issued today by Brookhaven National Laboratory in response to an article on RHIC published in yesterday's Sunday Times of London. Please share it with others in your area who do not have access to e-mail.

    ***

    Statement by John Marburger, Brookhaven Lab Director, On Consequences of RHIC Operations
    July 19, 1999

    Yesterday, the Sunday Times of London published a story under the headline "Big Bang Machine could destroy the Earth," with an accompanying editorial. The story has its origins in a letter in the July 1999 issue of Scientific American magazine, in which a prominent physicist describes a possible scenario in which an exotic elementary particle transforms its surroundings.

    I am familiar with the issue of possible dire consequences of experiments at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, which Brookhaven Lab is now commissioning. These issues have been raised and examined by responsible scientists who have concluded that there is no chance that any phenomenon produced by RHIC will lead to disaster.

    The amount of matter involved in the RHIC collisions is exceedingly small - only a single pair of nuclei is involved in each collision. Our universe would have to be extremely unstable in order for such a small amount of energy to cause a large effect. On the contrary, the universe appears to be quite stable against releases of much larger amounts of energy that occur in astrophysical processes.

    RHIC collisions will be within the spectrum of energies encompassed by naturally occurring cosmic radiation. The earth and its companion objects in our solar system have survived billions of years of cosmic ray collisions with no evidence of the instabilities that have been the subject of speculation in connection with RHIC.

    I have asked experts in the relevant fields of physics to reduce to a single comprehensive report the arguments that address the safety of each of the speculative "disaster scenarios." I expect the report to be completed well before RHIC produces the high-energy collisions necessary for any of these scenarios. When the report is completed, it will be broadly published and placed on the Laboratory's web site.

    **************************************
    BNL Media & Communications
    pubaf@bnl.gov
    516-344-3174 or 2345 * Fax 516-344-3368
    Brookhaven National Laboratory
    Bldg. 134 PO Box 5000
    Upton NY 11973
    www.bnl.gov
    ************************************

  240. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by delmoi · · Score: 1

    Oh, you'd be riped to shreads befor that happens.

    the closer you are to a black hole or any other mass, the more gravity pulls on you. The forces acting on diffrent parts of your body would be diffrent. this is why planets rotate (I think).

    the forces acting on your body near a black hole would be strong enough to rip it apart.
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  241. Re:Big Bang? by delmoi · · Score: 1

    If someone had asked 70 years ago what quantum teory was good for. No one could probably give him an answer. But look now we have computers

    yes we do, you do know that quantum mechanics has nothing to do with conventional computers (like the one your sitting at)
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  242. Re:dusting the atmosphere by delmoi · · Score: 1

    Considering how dificult it is, or at least was to refine U235 and plutonim, I'm gussing it would be a *lot* cheaper to build a nucliar bomb instaid, considering it would take tons of dust (and I mean that literaly) to whipe out a city, and the dust would probably take a while to kill everyone.

    besides, and atomic bomb would work pretty well anyway...
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  243. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by seanb · · Score: 1

    No, it would seem like forever to a hypothetical outside observer. A person cannot observe relativistic distortions of their own perception of time. Realtivistic distortion only applies when one frame of reference (something falling fast into a black hole) is observed by another (somebody not falling).

  244. Good Plutonium Document by SEWilco · · Score: 2

    That document is packed full of info. The largest inhalable particle size and its consequences was particularly interesting.

  245. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by SEWilco · · Score: 2

    ME: First human ever known to be swallowed by a black hole.
    Other: Then you should be in that line over there, with the other beings with cosmological endings.

  246. Not a problem by SEWilco · · Score: 3

    There was a letter to the editor in a recent Scientific American about that possibility. The reply explained why it was unlikely and pointed out that more powerful cosmic ray reactions happen frequently in our own atmosphere. If it could happen, it would have happened billions of years ago.

    1. Re:Not a problem by SEWilco · · Score: 3

      Here is the July SA letter to the editor and reply: Black Holes at Brookhaven?

    2. Re: Not a problem by drudd · · Score: 1

      Close but ice-9 doesn't turn everything into ice-9, rather it just causes water to freeze at high temperatures.

      Sux when you're made of water, but not much of a problem to say, a hunk of iron.

      Doug

      --
      Venn ist das nurnstuck git und Slotermeyer? Ya! Beigerhund das oder die Flipperwaldt gersput!
    3. Re:Not a problem by The_Jazzman · · Score: 1

      >If it could happen, it would have happened billions of years ago

      Perhaps it did... the Big Bang ring any bells ;-)

  247. I say go for it! by skajohan · · Score: 1
    I can't see anything bad coming out of this.

    If it's a fizzle, well, what the heck. They might find out what they wanted to. Great.

    If it really does end the world, swallow the earth and kill everyone, like, who will be sorry? Nobody will be able to blame the poor fellas who started it. We'll all be dead, so what. (Unless, of course, some sort of afterlife exists, and the premises of that afterlife does not rule out lynchings)

    Or, we end up with something really cool and unpredicted, like a small, not that very dangerous black hole or something that maybe is sort of useful. Imagine watching a tiny black hole swallow your pizza cartons!

    Don't hate the media, become the media.

  248. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by Fluffy+the+Cat · · Score: 1

    Oops. Better not go outside - there's a non-zero risk that you'll be hit by a bus. Mind you, there's a non-zero risk that the roof will fall on you if you stay inside.

    Nothing is perfectly safe. However, the chances of this creating a black hole that will wipe out the planet are significantly less than that of a nuclear holocaust at midnight on December the 31st. Or of a race of war-like aliens suddenly materialising and enslaving the entire human race next week, for that matter...

  249. Yeah, think of it as a universe eraser by Cptn+Proton · · Score: 1

    Forget about the little ol' black hole doing the earth fantasy, but how about doing the entire universe in less time than a twink of an eye. NPR did a nice little piece on something called

    Vacuum Decay

    A scary mathematical possibility, however slight.

  250. It is a mathematical possibility by Cptn+Proton · · Score: 1

    that the correct URL is

    Vacuum Decay Here

    See, it could be just like that, snapped somewhere unexpected.

  251. It's Vacuum Decay for the mathematically impatient by Cptn+Proton · · Score: 1

    NPR did a nice story on whacking the universe instantaneously.

    You can listen to what all the math means on this story about

    Vacuum Decay

  252. tiny black holes by wmute · · Score: 1

    My physics is a bit rusty but if a microscopic black hole formed wouldn't it actually be "A Good Thing" (tm) since it would be so small we should be able to suspend it in a magnetic field after it is charged of course and simply extract energy out of it.. creating a almost limitless and clean power supply?

    1. Re:tiny black holes by TwistedGreen · · Score: 1

      yep
      if we were to find, or create, a tiny black hole, we could tow it right next to the earth and all our problems would go away.
      puncture the universe for fun and profit?



  253. Black holes suck by DonkPunch · · Score: 2

    You know, I get nervous when the kid next door plays with firecrackers. How do you suppose our interstellar neighbors feel?

    "Look George, those crazy earthlings just turned their planet into a black hole."

    I wonder if the black holes already in the universe were caused by other civilizations trying the exact same thing once upon a time. It could be just another milestone in the evolution of a culture -- language, machinary, heavy-ion smashing....

    "Word is that earthlings have finally reached the heavy-ion smashing stage. I wonder if they'll be able to control it?"
    "
    "Whoops, guess not. Better put some orange cones around what used to be their solar system."

    It's not funny to you, but somewhere there's a hyper-intelligent lifeform that thinks it's hysterical.

    --

    Save the whales. Feed the hungry. Free the mallocs.
  254. Big Bang? by Rorschach · · Score: 1

    Why the hell do they want to recreate the creation of the universe anyway?

    Wouldn't that basically create a universe either, inside this one, or a universe that just wiped ours away.

    Some things you just don't do..putting your hand in the blender on purpose is one..this is probably another one....

    1. Re:Big Bang? by Field+Marshall+Stack · · Score: 1

      Simulating the conditions of something is clearly not the same thing as recreating that something. I mean, duh

      --
      "HORSE."
      -Flaming Carrot
  255. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by flieghund · · Score: 1

    If these companies didn't have to spend so much on taxes, accountants to calculate them, their support staff, and lawyers and their support staff, they could devote those funds to lowering costs or further research.

    Woo hoo, is that a laugh. I would say that there is definitely a "non-zero" probability that if these companies didn't have to spend so much on taxes, et cetera, they would devote those funds to higher executive salaries. As another poster has said, companies don't do altruistic research any more -- there is no ROI in it.

    In related news, there are several companies competing with a couple of governments (US included) to document the human genome. Altruism? Not a chance. In a year or two at least part of your genetic code will be patented by at least one company. Unless, of course, all that "wasteful" government spending on the human genome project pays off and they beat the companies to it.

    Government research pays off, no matter what that research is in, because YOU end up owning it. Not some company in California who will charge you nicely if you want your children to have blue eyes.

    --
    "I came here to kick ass and chew bubblegum. I'm all out of bubblegum." MSE USC APX AIA CSI CASp
  256. Wellfare Works! by thales · · Score: 1

    Bismark, The founder of the modern wellfare state, Said "The Purpose of Wellfare is to buy some peoples votes with other peoples money." Look at all the votes that money has bought. A lot of politicans would have to get a real job if it wasn't for wellfare votes.

    --
    Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
  257. Why was this moderated down?? by ZorinLynxie · · Score: 1

    It was friggin' hilarious. }:)

    --
    - =^o.o^=
  258. That plutonium document is just as stupid. by hey! · · Score: 1

    If you read this document objectively, it does manage to dispose of the issue of acute toxicity from accidental exposure (e.g., the anti Cassini hysteria), but is deeply flawed in other respects.

    The authors assume and define away a number of problems. Example: that terrorists with access to plutonium oxide would spread it into a reservoir in its current form. Even if there isn't some more soluble and absorbable compound of plutonium, why would the terrorist put it in the reservoir, which by its nature is designed to remove impurities, when they could simply put it into the intake of a viaduct get bilions of times the concentration? Is there any data at all suggesting the kind of settling effects you see in a reservoir (where water is impounded for years) in a viaduct (where water entering is destined for the tap in less than 24 hours)?

    Here is an example of a definition problem. What exactly is their definition of "inhale"? Obviously one that would preclude asbestos particles, coal dust and diesel particulates. A large plutonium particle would lodge in and irradiate lung tissue for years. If you really bought their arguments, then people handling and machining plutonium should not be expected or required to take any special precautions.

    The problem with this document is that the authors so obviously have an axe to grind, and so transparently use badly contrived examples, it discredits their conclusions, many of which I'm inclined to agree with.

    On the other hand, a lot of people who agree with this document are going to come away from this with some false optimism about the situation in Russian weapons labs. The real issue is that the purported terrorist uses of plutonium simply wouldn't be the highest and best use of the resource for the terrorists. If I were a terrorist, I'd use it to make a bomb. Or I'd trade it with a rogue state for explosives and blow up the viaducts supplying New York city. Or maybe trade it for some shoulder launched anti-aircraft systems. Of course the rogue state is getting the plutonium, with which it is probably going to make a bomb.

    I believe in using numerical reasoning to solve problems. Papers like this make my job harder, because they discredit in the public mind the very idea of numerical reasoning.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  259. Get a clue: poor people aren't stupid. by hey! · · Score: 1

    Nope. The historical problem with dropping money into underdeveloped regions is that we weren't giving it to the people, but to corrupt governments as part of our cold war effort to contain the Soviets. The poor didn't get much of it and we really didn't give a shit that the local pol were lining their pockets.

    Generally, poor people use money very rationally. First, they spend it on things which prolong survival. Next, they spend it on things which improve their prospects. Next they spend it on things which improve their status. People who live on the edge know a lot about spending for the greatest marginal value.

    You should look into initiatives to send capital to microenterprises, along with very elementary business education. If you put 10B into well a designed microenterprise program,you'd see real transformation in peoples lives. If you gave BG another 10B, you'd see pretty much more of the same old.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  260. Heat? by Black+Blade · · Score: 1

    How can any substance contain the incredible temperatures they describe in the article? Wouldn't the "miniscule fireball" simply melt everything around it?


    --
    #include "mysig.h"
  261. Wow by insomniac · · Score: 1

    And I live on Long Island, this is pretty fucking scary. You could already say I'm 'strange matter,' but I don't wanna get any stranger.

    --
    -- insomniac --
  262. Re:THIS IS A PLOT TO KILL THE JEWS!!! by insomniac · · Score: 1

    And a huge black hole would also wipe out Israel!

    --
    -- insomniac --
  263. Conservation of energy by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

    What about the expansion theory of the creation of the universe, where a quantum blip went into expansion mode... Isn't conservation of enery/matter a classical (i.e statistical) phyisics "law", rather than a quantum reality? If the inventors of Quantum theory don't claim to understand it, then I doubt any slashdotter does!

    1. Re:Conservation of energy by QuoteMstr · · Score: 1

      By this formula, a state of zero energy cannot exist! n/0 is undefined, not infinity.

  264. seti by dermond · · Score: 4

    now, that explains why SETI is not more successful: just a few years after that aliens learnd how to send out radio waves, their curious scientists turned their plantes into black holes.. ;-)))

  265. Forgive me if I'm wrong, or don't... but... by Seraphii · · Score: 1

    http://www.lhep.unibe.ch/newmass/intro/strangelets .html

    in this experiment they're colliding Pb atoms with up to 158Ge/V ... So who cares about 100Ge/V gold ion collisions? Is this the typical English attitude of "if we're doing it of course it's much more important than anywhere else" ? or are these people just unaware of the aforementioned experiments? or am I just completely missing something here?

    stay tuned to find out.

  266. The End of the World! Microsoft(TM) will save us ( by Nassah+the+Protoss · · Score: 1

    I am writing this for all those apocamaniacs out there in the wild.

    IF ANYONE CREATES A BLACKHOLE ON EARTH, the time it will take your brains to recognize it as such, eg:

    Time for signal to go from eye to brain, or another type of sense.

    will be longer than the time it will take the black hole to squeeze you and me and a lot of other things around us, until we are no longer bigger than nothing!

    So rest at peace, your death and ours will be swift.

    Now let's get serious, I was just wondering that maybe we ought to ask them to use NT to run the experiments!

    At its crash rate, no black hole can ever form and swallow us ALIVE!!!!!!!!!!

    Maybe even (just to make sure), ask it to write reports using Office2000 and showing them on screen! There combined crash rate will reassure our whole population.





    --
    Kill Microsoft? No! Just hire their GUI guys!
  267. I Think We're Reasonably safe by readams · · Score: 1

    Earth is constantly being bombarde by extremely high energy particles often called cosmic rays. These particles collide with particles in the upper atmosphere routinely at much higher energies then can be acheived in the particle accelerator. The biggest evidence against a singularity forming as a result of collisions in the collider is that we don't have singularites forming in our upper atmosphere.

  268. Whatever happened to..... by kaizen · · Score: 1
    Back in 1993 or so, when the US was still in a recession, the Congress decided, in all its wisdom, to ax funding for the super conductiong super collider. And for that year, they were given the same amount of money to shutdown and fill in the holes, that they requested to continue construction.....some questions :

    1) has spent eight years building its Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider...how did they get to maintain funding while the SCSC got killed?

    2) Is there any difference between the two projects other than size? (RHIC is two 2.4-mile circular tubes, SCSC circled the town of Waxahachie)

    3) Why don't we put some of this budget surplus back into "big science", like SCSC or a Mars mission, or do we have no interest in investments in our future?


    (Score:-2 Bitter and politically off topic)

    1. Re:Whatever happened to..... by Kohath · · Score: 1

      I know the answer to this one.

      The SSC collided small particles, not the huge gold nuclei used in the RHIC. The SSC was 52 miles (I can't remember whether that was circumference or diameter, so that figure may be off by a factor of PI.)

      Gold nuclei are big and complicated. Since they're big, it's easy to get high energies with a smaller collider. Since they're complicated, the reaction produces lots of crap, and there's a low signal to noise ratio. When you're trying to create and study interesting particles, it helps if all your reaction energy isn't used up making pointless boring particles that get in your way.

      I hate it when that happens.

  269. As long as they tell me before they try it out... by abamfici · · Score: 1


    Just give me a good 24 hours to go and get laid and go parachuting and get laid and eat lots of greasy junky food and get laid before they flip the switch just in case it does end the world and I'll be happy.

    ~Kevin
    :)

  270. Re:FIRST POST by abamfici · · Score: 1

    you forgot to first post the ask slashdot article

    ~Kevin
    :)

  271. whow.. how'd you get a 2? by abamfici · · Score: 1


    Moderation just doesn't work...

    ~Kevin
    :)

    1. Re:whow.. how'd you get a 2? by quadong · · Score: 1

      To clarify: "Logged in users start at 1 (although this can vary from 0 to 2 based on their overall contribution to discussions) and anonymous users start at 0." (from http://slashdot.org/moderation.shtml)

  272. Nothing I listed is illegal. Minimal guilt. by abamfici · · Score: 1

    Well if I was DAMN sure it would end, time to steal some cars and do some drugs and whatever the hell else that's illegal.

    If the world didn't end, I'd have minimal guilt about the sex and grease b/c I know whatever damage I would of sustained would be far less then dying without a big wide smile on my face.

    ~Kevin
    :)

  273. Couldn't testing wait until Jan. 1, 2001? by millia · · Score: 1

    Okay, besides the fact that there's turmoil in Iran, the Chinese have a neutron bomb, Taiwan decides to be agressive, the stock market is absurdly high, Russia has gone to hell in a handbasket and probably has lost fissionable materials, and the rain forests are still being wiped out, now we have to worry about the *complete* destruction of the earth?
    Can everybody just wait until after the millennium arrives? It's not like the experiments can't wait, and there's enough pre-millennial jitters going already. Let's let all the Y2K stuff get done, and let all the prophecy predictions prove baseless, and *then* we can try making black holes on the surface of the earth.

    --
    stored on computers from birth to the grave
    1. Re:Couldn't testing wait until Jan. 1, 2001? by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to call you a fool.

      Make sure all the prophecies a re crap and then destroy the earth?

      yeah... you're a fool, sorry.

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  274. Re:Even if there was a black hole created... by Betelgeuse · · Score: 1

    Right. If it were just the black hole created with those two little particles, it would be no problem. What they are worried about, however, is a chain reaction where all sorts of strange quarks would be stripped off atoms to create a massive black hole. Not that I beleive anything like this could happen, but that's what they are saying, I think.

    --
    I couldn't tell if you were experimenting with poor-man's cryogenics or looking for the orange sherbet.
  275. Black holes don't "suck" by coyote-san · · Score: 3

    This reminds me of the type I tried to explain the science fallacy that "vacuums suck" to a former girlfriend. Vacuums don't suck; it's the fact that there's fewer air molecules coming from a particular direction that results in the unbalanced pressure, and thence the "sucking" effect. Once the air pressure drops enough that the back pressure from the vacuum matches the internal pressure in the chamber you'll see no "sucking" effect -- and the air pressure in the chamber won't drop further.

    This article contains a similar fallacy: "black holes suck in..." They do not, they *cannot* reach out with some mysterious force to yank unsuspecting atoms to their death.

    They *do* have gravitational attraction, of course, but we're talking about a miniscule mass. Any singularity with this mass will be indescribably small, and even if it survives Hawking radiation it will only rarely hit a proton or electron just right to effect capture. I'm reminded of Rutherford's experiments shooting electrons at gold foil -- and in that case the few bounces where due to an electrostatic force many orders of magnitude stronger than gravity.

    The dangers from such a black hole are non-existent. The risk of strange matter contaminating the earth are harder to quantify... but where are the strange *stars* from the same effect?

    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
  276. well, for that matter,.... by RoLlEr_CoAsTeR · · Score: 1

    as I'm sure others have noted, if a big bang happened, which I'm seriously believing won't have a chance in all of creation to happen, there won't be anything left to make stoves with, no humans to heat it, and no food to cook in/on that stove. Anyway, why worry about the physical body? It's the spiritual body to be concerned with.

    --

    Insert mind here.
  277. Larry Niven Stories... by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 1

    Wasn't there a short story by Larry Niven where an astronaut on Mars commits murder by "accidentally" dropping a microscopic black hole through another man? At the end of the story,the narrator estimates that in a couple of years Mars would be gone, replaced by a slightly larger black hole in the same orbit.


    --
  278. Re:Igniting the Atmosphere by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 2
    Minor side note, NASA is going to send a plutonium loaded probe that might reenter the atmosphere in August. If it does about 72lb of that stuff is going to come down on us ... farewell then.

    First, get your facts straight. NASA isn't launching anything in August. Cassini, which NASA launched last year, will be making a close pass to Earth in order to get a gravity boost on it's way to Saturn.

    In any case, your description of the plutonium risk is a massive exaggeration. Plutonium is primarily dangerous if you breath it in as dust after managing to survive the atomic explosion that spread it around in the first place. If you do that, it is about the most toxic substance known to man - it will settle into your bones and just start spawning cancers.

    NASA probes, OTOH, are using ceramic pellets to encase the plutonium. No dust. You could probably even handle the pellets (for a short while) without ill effects.

    The biggest threat you face from Cassini is if it re-entered and happened to hit you on the head as it crashed.

    Sheesh. You'd think someone who posts on Slashdot would know a little science.


    --
  279. "Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by The+Silicon+Sorceror · · Score: 1

    If by some strange chance a singularity was created by the ion collider, what they would have to do is isolate it somehow, contain it, and get one of the space agencies to pack it off on a quick course out of the solar system (just don't point it towards anything important ;-). Just because it's a black hole doesn't mean it will suck in the entire earth - it wouldn't have enough mass. More likely a steadily increasing trickle of surrounding matter would be assimilated.
    Problem is, how do you suspend a black hole (preferably in vacuum) long enough to get it out of here? If it got away and ate its way down through Earth's crust, it would end up eventually destroying the earth as it absorbed matter at an exponentially increasing rate.

    --

    ~ Give me 101 plastic soldiers, and I will conquer the world.
    1. Re:"Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by Zoot. · · Score: 1

      That's kind of a dumb idea, given that "Any mass that is consumed increases the size of the black hole. Given enough surrounding mass, growth increases at an exponential rate..." Better not put too much trash in there. # Zoot

      --
      # Zoot
    2. Re:"Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

      Hey, we could put it into orbit around earth (or the sun) and blast all our trash off into it. It would be a, uhh, space fill.

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    3. Re:"Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by QuantumET · · Score: 1

      A black hole can be charged electrically; just shoot enough charged ions into it. Then, especially considering its weight, all you'd have to do is suspend it magnetically.

      Though I'd still be inclined to believe it'd vanish before it can suck up much matter; that thing would be _tiny_

    4. Re:"Emergency Black Hole Response Team" by rent · · Score: 1

      Dont forget that a black hole also bends time!!
      Time also decreases the closer you are to a black hole, and time is NIL when you are inside a back hole...

      So suspending a blackole into a vaccum, and blasting it for a ride out of this solar system might take a very long time, especially for the person that will be the closest to it!

  280. Run for your Life !! by Murphy(c) · · Score: 2

    We're all Gonna Die !!!!!!!!!

    This is exactly what Nostrademous said in one of his visions :
    "Humanity shall destroy itself within the first months of the 2nd Millenium. The Sword of thy death shall be known as RHIC*"

    *Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider

    I swear that this is an absolutely authentic translation from his old text, I haven't modified the slightest word.

    Murphy...
    Well it's one way like the other to stop Microsoft from the World Dominition, but isn't it a bit too much ?

  281. Oceans, too by wabewalker · · Score: 1
    There was the same thing with the oceans when they did testings under water. Would water molecules be torn apart, and then recombine (i.e., burn; the gases would have the right ratio)? And the energy set free would create a chain reaction, splitting even more water molecules?

    Didn't happen, I believe :P

    Still, I suppose scientists have to think about such matters. In this case, I'd say go for it! Mad science! Bwahaha!

    Linux note: HEPpc: Linux Resources f or High Energy Physics

    --
    --- Premature complacency is the evil of all roots
  282. Looking forward to the writeup by wabewalker · · Score: 1

    It's at Brookhaven National Labs. So when disaster happens and the Earth is destroyed, we get Steven Adler to do the writeup ;)

    --
    --- Premature complacency is the evil of all roots
  283. Cheap doomsday device though... by wct · · Score: 1

    If this thing only costs 350M pounds, I wonder how expensive it would be to construct a machine that could deliberately produce these strangelets. Something for the Dr Evil's of the future to consider anyway...

    1. Re:Cheap doomsday device though... by nukeboy · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of Forever Peace by Joe Haldeman. If I remember correctly, a bunch of those wild and crazy scientist types send some nanotech-drive probes out to Jupiter. Once there, they begin assembling humanity's biggest particle accelerator -- and realize that in duplicating the effects of the big bang, they could end up destroying the solar system.

      And I think some of the characters speculated that this is the kind of research -- which could lead to the creation of the "ultimate bomb" could be the reason why we haven't made contact yet. Figure every civilization starts playing around with this kind of technology, and then blows themselves up (intentionally or unintentionally -- doesn't really matter when your solar system is toast).

      Pretty good book, although not as good as his earlier "The Forever War".





  284. Y2K by The_Jazzman · · Score: 1

    So perhaps all those Year 2000 conspirasists really do have a case...

  285. Ya, GUT by FunOne · · Score: 1

    Work like this is to develop a GUT (Grand Unified Theory), a set of laws that govern each and everything, everytime across the universe. If we developed it, such quick advances would be made in physics: space travel, communication, etc. That 350m pounds is CHEAP is it is found.
    FunOne

    --
    FunOne
  286. Re:Even if there was a black hole created... by Somnus · · Score: 1

    Damn straight! Besides, there have been many high energy collision experiments, obviously. All physicists are doing by cranking up the energy is looking further back in time (i.e., asymptotically closer to the hypothetical t=0 point of this universe, not unlike approaching absolute zero temperature). I don't think there's any reason to expect this experiment to cross some magic threshold that would annihilate our universe, of even the Earth.

    Am I wrong? Anyway, if it were to happen, we probably wouldn't even know what hit us -- quick and painless.

  287. One of the possible experiments by AllenAtUT · · Score: 1

    I noticed this, and it struck a chord with me. My physics professor and TA from last year are both working on this project in a section called PHENIX. (See, we do more at the University of Tennessee than play football!! :)) They're searching for evidence of what the universe was like just seconds after the big bang and verifying theories on the type of matter existed... if I remember correctly, it was something like "Quark-gluon plasma." If you want to know a little more about this particular area, check out http://uther1.phy.ornl.gov/experiments/phenix.html and/or http://www.rhic.bnl.gov which is the collider group's homepage. Hope this helps out with a little of the confusion :). Go Vols! -Allen Cain

    --
    Allen Cain
  288. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    Oh shit! I better buy a wood stove.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  289. aspiring to be Dave Barry... by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    "But where would the energy for a such chain reaction come from?"

    You know those pennies you have in a jar? And the little plastic tray cashiers keep pennies in? Well these are the so-called "lost-pennies". Einstein's special relativity relates time, mass and energy. We all know time is money, and conversely money is time. We also know energy must be conserved. It follows then that these lost pennies must create a surplus of energy to fulfill the law of conservation of energy.

    Note: certain configurations of lost pennies, socks, and drying machines have been known to create black holes...so remember, always take the change out of your pockets before doing laundry

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  290. Re:Why it's not a problem by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    I hear that worried person saying:

    "Oh, gee, just a mega-H-bomb, not global annihilation...whew!"

    heh

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  291. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    Yes but even if time slowed exponentially, you should be dead by the time you might care. A few milliseconds past the horizon and you should be ripped to pieces.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  292. ummm, is there a point to this? by m|sTaMoFo · · Score: 1

    ok, is it just me, or does anyone else out there think that there are just a few slightly more important things out there for world governments to spend money on? Isn't anyone else disturbed by some of the money being tossed around on crap like this instead of somewhat more practical stuff like cures for horrible diseases? The more big nifty science crap I see on slashdot, the more I start to understand how fucked humanity's priorities are.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm not against this sort of research, but couldn't all this money and manpower be better used???

    Just a thought... and on the subject of misspending, imagine if our governments had put the money behind echelon to a legitmate purpose...

    1. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Greg+Merchan · · Score: 1

      Tim Berners-Lee was working at CERN doesn't mean the web had anything to do with high-energy research. The same motivation (communication of research data et al.) could have existed for any other research project. Similarly, that we currently devote much computing power to this doesn't mean that there is nothing else that could demand the same power. The first cyclotron was smaller than a cubic decimeter, IIRC, and anyone who knows what parts to get could probably find them in a hardware store; consider the nuclear reactor built for the University of Illinois (?) scavanger hunt.

      If the same funding went to cosmic ray research, we might have developed, for example, floating cities, like in Empire Strikes Back, or a working space station to further that research. I think the idea in economics is 'opportunity cost'; what other things could have been done with the money is part of the cost.

      That national labs have better technology than the technology industry is probably the best indictment of how much taxation has hindered the development and spread of technology. If these companies didn't have to spend so much on taxes, accountants to calculate them, their support staff, and lawyers and their support staff, they could devote those funds to lowering costs or further research.

      Also, every dollar that gov't spend on research displaces more than a dollar of private funds. Basically the companies have to spend more on taxes and their calculation to give to the gov't, the gov't has to process this money (all the while using it) and then, after much has been leaked off to unnessesary bureaucracy, the money gets to the labs. Since the industries have less to spend on research and they've 'contributed' already, they spend far less than they would have before because they become 'free-riders' of a sort.

      As for the medical research, the unhealthy influence of gov't on that should be clear. Cancers are far more common than AIDS, but which gets more funding? Much research, and looking around, indicates that the American diet is unhealthy. Gov't subsidies of various food industries artificially lower the cost of certain foods that would normally be less affordable and eaten less. By making toxic levels of these foods cheap, the gov't makes the population unhealthy and then asks for (nay, takes) more money to fix the problem it created. Al Capone would be so jealous.

    2. Re:ummm, is there a point to this? by Greg+Merchan · · Score: 1

      Historically, those with a good foundation in basic science are the first to say, "It can't be done". I can't remember how many times this has happened, but you'll find plenty of examples on a humorous-quote page.

      Public policy? I'm not sure, though I have some idea, of what you mean to say. Ozone is a chemical and is studied by industries that use or produce it. Climatology, I honestly hadn't heard of that; how is it different from meteorology or geology? Ecology? Unless there have been some remarkable changes in that field, it is still a pseudo-science run by fascists or facist sympathizers. The 'Creation Scientists' aren't the only ones who fabricate 'science' to promote a political agenda. From what I can see, environmental regulation has largely distracted attention from improper _local_ dumping which destroys lives and property in an effort to 'save the planet'. It has also produced a systems of kickbacks and head-turning in waste disposal that has created more problems than simple enforcement of land rights would have fixed.

      The banks in America are run by the federal gov't, and our currency is debased, so bad bank policies are another example of gov't meddling. There is some recourse through CBO's or credit unions, but you really have to shop around. (And sometimes even move or manage accounts across state lines, which the fed tries to prevent.)

  293. So you put it on the moon, by Error+404 · · Score: 1

    and it goes bad. You end up with a black hole with the mass of the moon.

    The moon is quite far enough. A black hole doesn't suck any harder than the same mass of cheese. The difference is that the cheese takes up space, while the black hole doesn't, unless you count the event horizon...

    Building the lab on the back side of the moon wouldn't make it any safer in terms of black hole problems. Radiation problems, sure. But when you consider solar and other cosmic radiation, anything human-made coming from the moon is going to be pretty minor. Human-made radiation sources on the planet can be a problem because they are inside the defenses.


    Fear my wrath, please, fear my wrath?
    Homer

    --
    We apologize for the inconvenience.
  294. Been There, Done That (Forever Peace) by devphil · · Score: 1

    The book Forever Peace by Joe Haldeman talks about this very subject. It's the driving point behind a very diverse plot; it gets pushed off to the side later, but provides the impetus for the characters to get into a hell of a mess.

    Good book, too. Won the Hugo for 1998.

    --
    You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)
  295. Even a small black hole would be very bad. by DzugZug · · Score: 1

    I can't find the book that gives the exact equation but I seem to remember reading that a black hole with an event horizon the size of one neutron would have a mass of about one hundred million tons. Now excuse the crudity of this next step but a million tons is about 1 billion killograms so 100M tons is 10^11 kg. Now, from High school physics:
    F = G (m_1 * m_2)/(r^2)
    so if m_1 is the black hole and m_2 is a 220 pound (100kg)person then:
    F = (6.67e-11)(1e11*100)/(r^2)
    F = 667/(r^2)
    Now this means that a person at one meter from the point of colision would feel a force of 667 Newtons -- about 130 pounds

    That is not a whole lot; however, there is a catch. As the size of a black whole increases (by size I mean the radius at which the escape velocity is equal to the speed of light) the density increases. This means that one of a radius of say an atom 1000 times the radius 1 billion times the volume could be 1 trillion times the mass. In other words, New York is gone. D.C. is gone. Philly is gone. Chicago, Boston, Miami, and maybe Houston are all gone. It probably wont destroy the earth but man made structures would have a problem. How much nearly sideways force can a building take? I don't know. Thats not my area of specialty and I encurage information from people who do know. But remember, the force is directly related to the mass and I do know that buildings are pretty heavy.

    Please any one who knows the mass of buildings or the amount of side force they can take please reply. Also if anyone can find the actual equation for the mass a black hole please post it. Probably (hopefully) it wont happen but it's still a fun exersise to figure the damage.

    1. Re:Even a small black hole would be very bad. by star_king · · Score: 1

      well now that you asked that. i will ask this- has anyone ever seen a black hole stop growing.my answer would be no it is not the nature of a black hole to stop when everything it pulls in to it only makes it more masive and pull in more mass of course makeing it more unstopable if there where such a thing as stoping a black hole.

      --
      explore your mind and find your time well spent
  296. Even if there was a black hole created... by QuantumET · · Score: 2

    ... it'd have a mass of what, a few atomic particles? It's even horizon would be less than an atomic radius, if that's even possible.

    And if I remember right, Stephen Hawking showed recently that micro black holes 'evaporate' almost immediately; the smaller they are, the faster they vanish

  297. Re:lame. Yeah Microsoft stuff usually suck by Heggsy · · Score: 1

    No, that will be the MS-Vac vacuum cleaner.

    I apologise to whoever has this as his/her .sig, but it's SOOO funny: The day Microsoft sells something that doesn't suck will be the day they sell vacuum cleaners.

    :)

  298. do you want to take the chance?! by agtofchaos · · Score: 1

    Suppose our fears are justified and it does happen? Do you want to be killed by a black hole?

    --
    ---Got Coffee?---
    1. Re:do you want to take the chance?! by agtofchaos · · Score: 1

      That part about the black hole disappearing made me think about the possibilities of how painful it could be. Suppose it were to rip off your legs in the last few seconds before it was destroyed?

      --
      ---Got Coffee?---
  299. Re:Igniting the Atmosphere by Field+Marshall+Stack · · Score: 1

    There were some fears of the a-bomb igniting the atmosphere expressed among those at the first a-bomb test, but they weren't really taken seriously. I know there _was_ some serious concern, however, of the first underwater h-bomb test starting a fusion reaction in the ocean itself...

    --
    "HORSE."
    -Flaming Carrot
  300. Re:IT IS A PROBLEM by Jor · · Score: 1

    Er - how do you know that the BigBang that caused our universe to exist has not been caused by two stray gold ions colliding in a previous universe?

    Just a thought.

    --

    --
    Jor
  301. The Big Mistake - Dan Simmons Style? by mdvkng · · Score: 1

    Waitaminute! Shouldn't we have interstellar capability before we start creating black holes? That way we can leave.

    I'm thinking in the style of Simmons' "Hyperion" where mini-blackholes are used to punch holes in space-time alowing for instant jump-doors and so alleviating all that tedious mucking about in hyperspace. The first hole was created on Earth, got loose, and turned the Earth into a Swiss Cheese. Of course there was lots of time to leave and they had the abilility to leave by tediously mucking about in hyperspace.

    So maybe these guys should wait a few centuries or so...

    -M

  302. Why it's not a problem by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4

    I'm not a Physicist, but I'll try to play one on the net. Here's what I think is the current theory:

    The vacuum is full of virtual particle-antiparticle pairs, constantly forming and annihilating, with a mass-time product less than the uncertainty principle's magic number. When a pair occurs near an event horizon, one of the particles can tunnel deep enough into it to be annihilated by its antiparticle below the horizon, allowing the partner to escape - as if the particle below the horizon had tunneled out. (If there isn't an antiparticle available, there isn't energy available to kick loose the particle that didn't penetrate the event horzon. So it falls in, too, and the virtual particle-antiparticle pair disappear back into the vacuum.)

    So black holes evaporate. Bigger black holes have a bigger separation between the mass and the event horizon, and thus a lower mass density just under it. So the smaller the black hole the faster it eveporates. "Evaporate" means emit a spray of energetic subatomic particles.

    If I have the constants right, a stellar-sized black hole emits the odd particle now and then, a mountain-mass black hole is a good approximation of a nuclear power plant's core, and so on. But radiation reduces their mass, so the faster they radiate, the faster they shrink, and the FASTER their radiation increases, until the event horizon suddenly disappears and the remaining particles come blasting out of the former cage at nearly lightspeed. It goes BANG big-time - because this happens when there's still a lot of stuff in there. Current high-end H-bombs would blush with envy.

    A black hole with the mass of a couple heavy ions would have a very short lifetime, even as compared with other subnuclear processes. Making one that would have a lifetime in seconds would consist of creating a density of matter that would push stuff through the event horizon faster than it tunnels out. That's equivalent to making a BIG atomic fireball and squeezing it down to the size of a single nucleus.

    So we might see black holes as screwier-than-usual short-lived composite particles acting as intermediate steps in sunuclear reactions. But we shouldn't see a baby black hole falling quietly out of the accellerator and eating the earth.

    Of course, my understanding of the model could be wrong. B-)

    Or the model could be wrong. In which case, other predictions from it (such as the hole forming in the first place) are also up for grabs.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  303. Re:dusting the atmosphere by jjohnson · · Score: 1

    I'm reminded of a story printed in Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine, wherein the officer in charge of the Manhattan Project realises the tremendous lethality of plutonium dust. To prevent its use by governments [who might 'dust' cities to kill the inhabitants quickly and cheaply], he takes the dust under his control and the aircraft and holds Washington hostage to make himself a military dictator. After dusting a small town to prove its effectiveness, Washington capitulates. As dictator of the U.S., he seizes the U.N. and repeats the threat, demanding that all nuclear materials and aircraft be turned over to his control. He creates a U.N. military with control of all plutonium and aircraft, ends air travel entirely, and becomes the first ruler of Earth, incidentally putting an end to war and national sovereignty.

    The Russians withhold some aircraft, and Moscow gets dusted, killing all inhabitants. The story didn't get into the whole 'benevolent dictator' thing, but it did raise the quesion of why plutonium dust was never developed as a weapon.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  304. Re:dusting the atmosphere by jjohnson · · Score: 1

    I don't know how correct the science of the story is, but it made clear that the dust was easily obtained as 'tailings' of the refining process, and considered a nuisance until it was realized how lethal it is. I know that actual tailings from uranium mining is a big environmental problem at uranium sites like in northern Saskatchewan.

    Plutonium dust is, in fact, tremendously lethal even in small doses, and the level of radiation poisoning it creates kills you quickly from radiation sickness, not slowly from cancer.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  305. Oh Great, Jack VanImpe will have a field day now. by fr0g · · Score: 1

    Great, now my mom will hear that idiot read this news story on his show and proclaim that along with the news of Kenedey going down in the ocean that the end of the world is near....

    Ever watch that guy? He can turn a news story about a cat stuck in a tree into bible relevations.

  306. Chasing the God particle by EEE · · Score: 1

    I for one believe that tampering with the beauty and order of nature is foolhearty and all for the sake of deeming ourselves as gods. It's almost as foolish as genetic cloning. Even without the formation of stranglets or miniture black holes, generating strange subatomic particles that can alter matter is no child's play. Beware of the Manhattan project part deux.

  307. Gee, I think I read this book... by signe · · Score: 1

    Sounds like the London Sunday Times has been reading Cosm by Gregory Benford.

    In it, a scientist borrowing time at Brookhaven's RHIC creates a "cosm" (universe in a very heavy silver ball several feet across). She spirits it back to UC, and then the folks at the RHIC try to create some more, not knowing they could destroy the world, and end up just destroying most of the ring.

    Was a good book the first time around.

    -Todd

    ---

    --
    "The details of my life are quite inconsequential..."
  308. Appocalypse Now by cdlu · · Score: 2

    "A successful test-firing was held on Friday and the first nuclear collisions will take place in the autumn, building up to full power around the time of the millennium. "

    So January 1st, y2k, we won't need to worry about computer failures - they're putting this thing in full swing.

    Reminds me of a quote from some field commander in the US civil war:
    "At this range they couldn't hit an elephant!" Those were his last words. :)

  309. That's Bad by lukpac · · Score: 2

    Can anyone say "Total protonic reversal"? ;-)

    "Ok, important safety tip. Thanks Egon."

  310. Stupid by Raving+Lunatic · · Score: 1

    The chance probably is so small that it's nothing to worry about, but it irks me somewhat that some bunch of curious suckers think they have the right to flip the on-switch on a device that could *possibly* condense the earth to the size of a marble, or turn it into a big ball of strangeness, not that the latter would effect a perceptable change.

    Anyway, they'd better master the graviton or get warp-fields working, or discover a limitless energy source sometime soon, 'cause it's time these colliders produced some useful results. I mean, really, what do W and Z vector-bosons have to do with powering spacecraft?

    - A disgruntled hacker.

  311. soo Ironic by Homogenized · · Score: 1

    how ironic is it that this will device will go into full production around the time of the millenium, do they do these things on purpose? too many coincidences....

  312. Igniting the Atmosphere by fwr · · Score: 1

    Anyone remember when the scientist had a fear of igniting the atmosphere when they were testing the H-bomb? I always thought that one was funny also. Or was that some kind of Cobalt bomb or something? Geesh, I'm loosing it.

  313. Re:IT IS A PROBLEM by benmg · · Score: 1

    HAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHA

    Anyway, I'd like to know more about strange matter. Have people written about it?

  314. Get the science right, people by wowbagger · · Score: 1

    First: Yes, if they did manage to squeeze some mass into a quantum black hole, the hole would radiate away it's entire mass as Hawking radiation in fraction of a femtosecond. However, that mass would only be the mass of two ions (plus whatever relativistic mass they had put on). I expend more energy that that each second keeping my skin warm.
    Second, if I remember my quantum chromodynamics correctly, a single quark cannot exist as a real particle. It must either be bound up to its antiparticle, or to enough other quarks to balance out to "colorless". Therefor, there is no way a single quark of any flavor could come out of the reaction.
    I think the place that wrote that article seized upon the name "strange" as somehow menecing, and is trying to stir up controversy (which, given the traffic on /., was a successful strategium).
    Go read the actual science site, and go get some books (Brief History of Time and the like) and then make up your mind.

  315. Re:IT IS A PROBLEM by Chuck777 · · Score: 1

    Actually, not everyone agrees that there was a big bang.
    I find the theory quite insane myself.
    I'm not a creationist, but I think steven hawkings doesn't buy into the theory either.

    I don't beleive there's enough gravatational force in the universe to cause it to collapse onto itself, and I don't buy the "dark matter" hack of a theory to explain that away.

    But hey, what we believe today will be laughed at next century.

    Robs@dreamforge.com

  316. Re:lame by TummyX · · Score: 1

    that's all i can say. totally lame.

  317. Once apon a time.. by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 2

    Once there was a Man who Built a Machine that Could Destroy the World by flipping a Single Switch. Or So He Thought.
    He didnt know.
    And so he flipped the Switch-
    And never found out.

    I read that in a Heinlein book, I dont know where he got it from, it sounded like he was quoting, too.

    Personally, as the story continues, I would not want to flip the switch.
    How the story continues is that there is so much risk, although so much gained, they send it into space and eventually move it to the far side of the moon.

    But if we create a Black Hole that isnt far enough.
    And what do we gain? Knowledge is not worth more than the Bystander's family.

    If you want to learn, that's fine, But let's learn something else first, Like Mass Transference via Matter/Energy conversion or Hyperspace. I have some theories on that Involving ZeroG, Vacuum, and Kelvin0... but that's another post :)

    Then set up a lab in a distant corner of the galaxy, beyond the fringe, and do whatever you want.

    Before risking a farm by building a channel, you get consent of the farmer. Before risking the Solar System by building a research facility, you get consent of the solar system. Wich means building a few mars rockets and Jupitor Shuttles to check all the areas unknown...


    "..And other such nonsence.."
    I'm not done, but that's it for now.


    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  318. That's the thing... by Onion · · Score: 1

    Any mass that is consumed increases the size of the black hole. Given enough surrounding mass, growth increases at an exponential rate.