It's been nice knowing all of you.
- nitrah55
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It's been nice knowing all of you.
Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
One person not worried about this side effect is Dr. Stephen Hawking, who believes the collider doesn't have enough energy to create a black hole. Dr. Hawking was the first person to posit the existence of black holes, and creating one would make him, in his own estimation, a shoo-in for the Nobel Prize in physics.
Well, in the event Dr. Hawking's wrong about the LHC, let me just take this opportunity to say, it's been a blast.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
One person not worried about this side effect is Dr. Stephen Hawking, who believes the collider doesn't have enough energy to create a black hole. Dr. Hawking was the first person to posit the existence of black holes, and creating one would make him, in his own estimation, a shoo-in for the Nobel Prize in physics.
Well, in the event Dr. Hawking's wrong about the LHC, let me just take this opportunity to say, it's been a blast.
I am about 25% sure of this.
- SportsFan68
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Wow! What if they do create a new little universe?
What a coup!
What a coup!
-- In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people.
-- America would be a better place if leaders would do more long-term thinking. -- Wilma Mankiller
-- America would be a better place if leaders would do more long-term thinking. -- Wilma Mankiller
- MarleysGh0st
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
You mean it will be a blast.nitrah55 wrote: Well, in the event Dr. Hawking's wrong about the LHC, let me just take this opportunity to say, it's been a blast.
And this thread really ought to have been started by Chicken Little!
- ulysses5019
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
Reminds me of the New Zealand film The Quiet Earth.nitrah55 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
One person not worried about this side effect is Dr. Stephen Hawking, who believes the collider doesn't have enough energy to create a black hole. Dr. Hawking was the first person to posit the existence of black holes, and creating one would make him, in his own estimation, a shoo-in for the Nobel Prize in physics.
Well, in the event Dr. Hawking's wrong about the LHC, let me just take this opportunity to say, it's been a blast.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089869/
I believe in the usefulness of useless information.
- earendel
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
Or David Brin's Earth.ulysses5019 wrote:Reminds me of the New Zealand film The Quiet Earth.nitrah55 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
One person not worried about this side effect is Dr. Stephen Hawking, who believes the collider doesn't have enough energy to create a black hole. Dr. Hawking was the first person to posit the existence of black holes, and creating one would make him, in his own estimation, a shoo-in for the Nobel Prize in physics.
Well, in the event Dr. Hawking's wrong about the LHC, let me just take this opportunity to say, it's been a blast.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089869/
"Elen sila lumenn omentielvo...A star shines on the hour of our meeting."
- andrewjackson
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Or Larry Niven's The Hole Man.
Coincidentally I'm re-reading N-Space, a collection of Niven short stories and novel excerpts. I hit that short story last night after reading about the Chicken Littles suing CERN earlier in the day.
Coincidentally I'm re-reading N-Space, a collection of Niven short stories and novel excerpts. I hit that short story last night after reading about the Chicken Littles suing CERN earlier in the day.
Spoiler
He destroys Mars with a quantum black hole years before Brin tried to do the same thing to Earth.
Last edited by andrewjackson on Tue Sep 09, 2008 1:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
No matter where you go, there you are.
- silvercamaro
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
This would have some beneficial side effects. For example, it would force me to postpone my trip to Denver.nitrah55 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
- Rexer25
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
See? There is a sliver lining to every cloud!silvercamaro wrote:This would have some beneficial side effects. For example, it would force me to postpone my trip to Denver.nitrah55 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
Enough already. It's my fault! Get over it!
That'll be $10, please.
That'll be $10, please.
- Carmelo Anthony
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
I'm insulted!silvercamaro wrote:This would have some beneficial side effects. For example, it would force me to postpone my trip to Denver.nitrah55 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
If you can't be right, be Fanny.
- Sir_Galahad
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- frogman042
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- ne1410s
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nitrah:
https://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_wor ... s_fro.html
No wonder he's hitting 7-11 stores:One person not worried is Dr. Stephen Hawking...
https://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_wor ... s_fro.html
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- Beebs52
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- Beebs52
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Just on my feets, you snuggle bunny, you.Basset wrote:You got a problem with Bassets?Beebs52 wrote:I just hope none of those strangelets squeak past anyone and start doing whatever a strangelet does.
Are they cute? Do they like shoes? Do they suck you into a black hole of clearance sales where all they have is Hush Puppies?
Well, then
- Ritterskoop
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Didn't Hawking change his mind about string theory or someother major thing?
My faith in him has been shaken, though I still think he is a badass.
They were debating Sunday night how to run the story about the big bad hole, as they called it, and the boss said if the world went away and we hadn't had the story we would look pretty stupid.
My faith in him has been shaken, though I still think he is a badass.
They were debating Sunday night how to run the story about the big bad hole, as they called it, and the boss said if the world went away and we hadn't had the story we would look pretty stupid.
If you fail to pilot your own ship, don't be surprised at what inappropriate port you find yourself docked. - Tom Robbins
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At the moment of commitment, the universe conspires to assist you. - attributed to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
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At the moment of commitment, the universe conspires to assist you. - attributed to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
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wbtravis007
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- andrewjackson
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Hawking once bet that information couldn't cross the boundary of a black hole but has now pretty much conceded that he was wrong about that.Ritterskoop wrote:Didn't Hawking change his mind about string theory or someother major thing?
My faith in him has been shaken, though I still think he is a badass.
They were debating Sunday night how to run the story about the big bad hole, as they called it, and the boss said if the world went away and we hadn't had the story we would look pretty stupid.
He had earlier bet that black holes didn't exist at all but he has said that it was a "safety" bet. Since almost all his work involved black holes he wanted to have something to fall back on in case it turned out they didn't exist after all.
No matter where you go, there you are.
- traininvain
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
There's no worry, I'm sure that Sarah Palin could take care of any little ol' black hole that might pop up. She walked on water last week, right?nitrah55 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
One person not worried about this side effect is Dr. Stephen Hawking, who believes the collider doesn't have enough energy to create a black hole. Dr. Hawking was the first person to posit the existence of black holes, and creating one would make him, in his own estimation, a shoo-in for the Nobel Prize in physics.
Well, in the event Dr. Hawking's wrong about the LHC, let me just take this opportunity to say, it's been a blast.
Enjoy every sandwich
- mrkelley23
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Re: It's been nice knowing all of you.
nitrah55 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside Geneva will rev up, smashing sub-atomic particles into one another in an attempt to simulate conditions at the dawn of the universe.
One possible side effect is the creation of black holes, which some are concerned will swallow Earth, the Solar System and pretty much everything we're well aquainted with.
One person not worried about this side effect is Dr. Stephen Hawking, who believes the collider doesn't have enough energy to create a black hole. Dr. Hawking was the first person to posit the existence of black holes, and creating one would make him, in his own estimation, a shoo-in for the Nobel Prize in physics.
Well, in the event Dr. Hawking's wrong about the LHC, let me just take this opportunity to say, it's been a blast.
Excuse me? Since when did Hawking originate the idea of black holes?
Hawking was born in 1942.
Einstein referred to the idea in his general theory of relativity (1916), although he didn't call it by that name.
Karl Schwarzchild did some early theoretical calculations, also in 1916, including how small such a collapsed object would have to be. Our Sun, for instance, would have a Schwarzchild radius of only about 4 miles in diameter.
Oppenheimer and Snyder showed that the object would have to be much larger than our Sun -- in 1939.
John Wheeler is the one who coined the term "black hole" -- in 1964.
Hawking's contribution is a modern revision of black hole theory, including how they must end. But he is far, FAR from the first to "posit their existence." In fact, an argument can be made that it was the great mathematician LaPlace in 1796, who "posited their existence."
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman
- tubadave
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wbtravis007 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside...
Somebody's been sending me e-mails wanting me to get a Large Hadron.
Oh.
Wait.
Never mind.
I can't believe I'm about to admit that my mind might ever work anything like Mr. Travis', but when I saw a news blurb about the collider today, I honestly first read it as something that might appear in a spam email. LOL
"Not all chemicals are bad. Without chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen, for example, there would be no way to make water, a vital ingredient in beer." -- Dave Barry
- littlebeast13
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- minimetoo26
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wbtravis007
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There's no known cure for skiplexia. The good thing is you can always say: "Hey, I may be old, but I'm immature!"tubadave wrote:wbtravis007 wrote:Tomorrow at 3:30 am ET, the Large Hadron Collider outside...
Somebody's been sending me e-mails wanting me to get a Large Hadron.
Oh.
Wait.
Never mind.
I can't believe I'm about to admit that my mind might ever work anything like Mr. Travis', but when I saw a news blurb about the collider today, I honestly first read it as something that might appear in a spam email. LOL