Since the world is gonna end in an hour, i burned some gas
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Looks like we made it..
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Did i miss something?
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drift86;235099 wrote:
Someone fill me in! I don't know what anyone is even talkin aboutsome multi-million dollar project on the big bang theory, scientists were trying to repeat it and it could have created a black hole and swallowed up the earth....but it didnt so we are ok...
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JN210;235100 wrote:
some multi-million dollar project on the big bang theory, scientists were trying to repeat it and it could have created a black hole and swallowed up the earth....but it didnt so we are ok...speak for yourself
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tjamz;235076 wrote:
that made even less sense than anything that JN210 has posted here in while. Nice work! :icon_rabbit:oh geeze, here comes the grammer police..
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MisterCMK;235082 wrote:
See you all in hell. Somebody save me a seat.Sorry wont be seeing ya!
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They won't be colliding particles til October, for sure by the end of the year. Today was just the first time they accelerated particles around the full length of the accelerator.
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JN210;235100 wrote:
some multi-million dollar project on the big bang theory, scientists were trying to repeat it and it could have created a black hole and swallowed up the earth....but it didnt so we are ok...try multi-billion. and if it wouldve created a black hole it wouldve lasted for maybe a quadrillionth of second and only devoured a few subatomic particles.
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d^flex;235107 wrote:
try multi-billion. and if it wouldve created a black hole it wouldve lasted for maybe a quadrillionth of second and only devoured a few subatomic particles.yeah, We were talking about it in class the other day...i think its pretty cool.
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DelSlow;235122 wrote:
looks like someone did some Googling.actually, i was paying attention in chem class for once.
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GENEVA — Scientists successfully fired the first beam of protons around a vast underground tunnel below the Swiss-French border on Wednesday, in a test run of a multibillion-dollar experiment to shed light on the origins of the universe.
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is based more than 300 feet below ground, with a circumference of about 16 miles, and is operated from the control room of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN).
During the test, a beam of protons completed a clockwise lap of the accelerator ring, in an extreme vacuum cooled by liquid helium.
Lyn Evans, LHC project leader, called the test run a "fantastic moment" hailing a new era in scientists' understanding of the universe.
Later, subatomic particles will be sent round the accelerator ring in opposite directions at almost the speed of light, guided by a powerful magnetic field produced by superconductor magnets, and will collide in front of huge particle detectors
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