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The Mythos of the Large Hadron Collider

September 18, 2008

Billions of years from now, a father and his young daughter may be enjoying the twinkling beauty of a clear summer night when she asks, “Dad, how did all those stars get there?” To which he will reply, “It all started with a big bang.” Today, as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) ramps up to speed, speculations abound as to whether science is on the verge of the biggest breakthrough in history or on the event horizon of creating a black hole. Even some physicists are concerned that while we think we are safely recreating only the first instant of the Big Bang, we may actually be hitting the “Reset” button on the entire cycle of creation instead.

High energy particle colliders are nothing new. The first ones were developed in the 1930s and called cyclotrons. This type of device used large magnets to guide and accelerate particles ever faster through a spiral configuration. By the early 1940s, such a device was used to enrich uranium for the Manhattan Project. The cyclotrons were eventually developed into extreme high-energy particle colliders which were the biggest machines ever conceived and can only be seen in their entirety from the air because, instead of spiral tracks, they use full circles that are miles wide. They are often referred to as “atom smashers” because they send two particles at high speed around a circle in opposite directions and then document their collision. There are currently seventy-five particle colliders located on six continents around the world. Of the largest, one is the International Linear Collider located at Fermilab. The other is the Large Hadron Collider built for CERN, which is the European Organization for Nuclear Research.

The expanded use of so many colliders opened the door for multiple research projects revealing the existence of one new particle after another. Of course, with every new particle came its anti-particle twin. The cornucopia of new particle discovery was so plentiful that it eventually became known as “the particle zoo.” It’s important to realize that few, if any, of these anti-particles have actually been recorded. They are merely theorized to keep the mathematical equations balanced. This same sort of theoretical balancing act is also applied to the existence of many fields and forces. For every force, there must be a particle to carry it. Conversely, every new particle found by the colliders must be associated with a force.

The most elusive of these particles, and one that the LHC was specifically designed to find, is the Higgs Boson, which is associated with the Higgs Field. It is commonly referenced in science circles as the “God particle” and is thought to be the reason why things have mass. The force of gravity is associated with mass. In Einstein’s pursuit of a single Theory of Everything (TOE), he simply could not get gravity to play well with relativity theory. And neither could anyone else. Mass and gravity have successfully provided a monkey wrench to thwart all attempts by physicists to establish a Grand Unified Theory (GUT).

Considering the fact that much of the science behind the experiments that will be conducted at the LHC are, at best, theoretical, is it any wonder so many folks are nervous about what might happen? Let’s get a historical perspective. Even though theories of the world being round instead of flat were recorded as early as fourth century B.C., many still thought that Columbus would certainly fall of the edge of the Earth if he sailed west into the unknown. Many people, scientists among them, thought that a plane would simply explode if it attempted to break the sound barrier. When the U.S. was ready to send a living being into orbit, they chose a chimp rather than a human because they were concerned about unknown contaminations from space. It’s often overlooked that Einstein did not win his Nobel Prize in Physics for E=mc2. At the time, relativity theory was looked upon with a raised eyebrow and the scientific community withheld its laurels until the theory could be substantiated. History shows us that new theories are usually not embraced immediately. More often than not, they are fully accepted only after they are proven.

Will the LHC create an uncontrollable Big Bang or a black hole big enough to swallow the Earth and all its surrounding space, as sensationalized by the popular media? Not likely. It’s more likely that the quantum leap of faith taken by a few contemporary physicists will demonstrate a lack of fear based on an understanding that transcends the science and the math. In doing so, they just might give us a small glimpse from a unique perspective into the nature of reality.

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About the Author:
MaAnna Stephenson – Formally trained in electronics, acoustics and music and initiated as a shamanka, MaAnna Stephenson has lived immersed in the relationship between science and intuitive wisdom. Her exemplary work spans the music industry, wood carving, and authoring The Sage Age, a book illuminating new models for new thought. Visit www.SageAge.net for more. Some content excerpted from The Sage Age – Blending Science with Intuitive Wisdom © 2008 MaAnna Stephenson.

Photo Credit: The Large Hadron Collider/ATLAS at CERN by Image Editor

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5 Responses to “The Mythos of the Large Hadron Collider”

  1. joe nolan on September 18th, 2008 4:53 pm

    Genies are not so easily put back into their bottles.

    This is no time for cowardice. Let’s stand tall, speak clearly, and step forward into the unknown.

    There is much to fear in our own curiosities. However, the greatest fear is the fear that prevents us from acting when prompted to move beyond the borders of the familiar.

    Let the chips fall. That’s what the chips are for.

    J

  2. Robert Marsh II on September 18th, 2008 8:33 pm

    The reasons to publicly debate the LHC operations, out-number the reasons not to!
    Everyone is invited to join a personal ongoing CERN LHC/ALICE/ATLAS Public Debate Invitational in progress, through the following link:

    http://thefifthknight.blogspot.com/

  3. JTankers on September 19th, 2008 1:01 am

    I liked the article. Thank you for not overstating what is known and what is not known. :idea:

    Now for a bit of poetic partisan ranting before high energy collisions might begin in October… :cool:

    is this wise, [17]
    little white lies, [1][6][7][8]
    one scientist cries, [3]
    in time everyone dies,
    but to win a Nobel prize… [6]

    safety they tried to infer,
    a disaster they tried to deter,
    Wagner[5] and Sancho[1] and Plaga[4] and Rössler[2][3],
    nobel their concerns were,
    but their concerns CERN did spurn and slur[6]

    risk CERN did censor,[1][7][9]
    populace did get tenser,
    holes blacker than crows? [2]
    strange particle mass grows? [5]
    earth to get much denser?

    will Black holes we bake? [10][11]
    would strange matter break?
    could possible harm they make? [12]
    did Steven Hawking blunder? [2][14][15][16]
    could Earth be taken under?
    will our world they take?[13]

    or just secrets of nature to tame,
    no black holes to grow from flame?
    no strange matter condensing earth?
    no unstoppable growth given birth?
    or just no one left to blame?

    law suits filed,[5]
    scientists riled,[18]
    collisions to begin,
    nobel prizes to win,
    god to have smiled? [17]
    or earth to be defiled? [2]

    Nuclear Safety Officer Walter L. Wagner seeks proof safety[5], Dr. Otto Rössler seeks proper refutation of his concerns[2] and Dr. Habil. Rainer Plaga proposes feasible risk mitigation measures.[4]

    [1] http://www.lhcdefense.org/pdf/Sancho%20v%20Doe%20-%20Affidavit%20of%20Luis%20Sancho.pdf AFFIDAVIT OF LUIS SANCHO IN UPPORT OF TRO AND PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION (2008)

    [2] http://www.wissensnavigator.com/documents/OTTOROESSLERMINIBLACKHOLE.pdf Abraham-Solution to Schwarzschild Metric Implies That CERN Miniblack Holes Pose a Planetary Risk, Prof. Dr. Otto Rossler (2008)

    [3] http://www.wissensnavigator.com/documents/spiritualottoeroessler.pdf A Rational and Moral and Spiritual Dilemma – Otto E. Rössler (2008)

    [4] arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0808/0808.1415v1.pdf On the potential catastrophic risk from metastable quantum-black holes produced at particle colliders – Dr. Habil. Rainer Plaga Rebuttal (2008)

    [5] http://www.lhcdefense.org/lhc_legal.php US Federal Lawsuit Filings – Walter L. Wagner (2008)

    [6] http://www.lhcfacts.org/?p=72 CERN?s Dr. Ellis tells only half of the story – LHCFacts.org (2008)

    [7] twomosquitoes.blogspot.com/2008/09/cern-wins-battle-at-wikipedia-lhc.html CERN wins battle at Wikipedia, LHC history scrubbed, TWO MOSQUITOES

    [8] http://www.lhcfacts.org/?cat=44 Culture of Superiority? (June 1, 2008)

    [9] http://www.lhcfacts.org/?cat=124 Wikipedia LHC Page is Being Altered by CERN (July 9, 2008)

    [10] cerncourier.com/cws/article/cern/29199 The case for mini black holes, CERN Courier (2004)

    [11] http://www.photonics.com/content/news/2008/September/9/93181.aspx Threats Won’t Stop Collider, photonics.com (Sep 9, 2008)

    [12] http://www.cambridgeblog.org/tag/shahn-majid/ Particle Accelerators, CERN, and Doomsday. Prof Shahn Majid (2008)

    [13] http://www.reason.com/news/show/128492.html A 1-in-1,000 Chance of Götterdämmerung, Will European physicists destroy the world? Ronald Bailey | September 2, 2008

    [14] xxx.lanl.gov/abs/gr-qc/0304042 Do black holes radiate?. Dr. Adam Helfer (2003)

    [15] arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0607137, On the existence of black hole evaporation yet again, Prof. VA Belinski (2006) [16] On the Stability of Black Holes at the LHC, M. D. Maia, E. M. Monte (19 Aug 2008)

    [17] http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/science/article4727894.ece Peter Higgs launches attack against Nobel rival Stephen Hawking, TimesOnLine (Sep 11, 2008)

    [18] http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/09/10/do1005.xml, We must be wary of scientific research, Gerald Warner Telegraph.co.uk, (10 Sep 2008)

  4. JTankers on September 19th, 2008 1:03 am

    Hello Joe Nolan,

    I recommend you play a tournament or two of Texas Hold’em poker.

    You quickly learn not to bet the pot too often or eventually you lose everything.

    JTankers :cool:

  5. admin on September 19th, 2008 8:32 am

    @JTankers

    Thanks for the links. I’ll be sure to check them out.

    And very true on the poker… I’ve been there, done that. ;)

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