"This is not the first time, as the government noted, that Mr. Wagner has forecast the apocalypse. In 1999 and 2000, he sued to stop the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, or Rhic, at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island using the same arguments, which were found to be “speculative.” ...
Others see religion...
The enormous constructions at Cern evoke great cathedrals and Egyptian pyramids, says Jonathan Glancey. Paradoxically, this extreme expression of modern science may be the most spritual structure of our time.
CMS – one of the LHC's four giant detectors. The Compact Muon Solenoid is a general-purpose "camera" designed to look for anything and everything that may emerge from collisions between particles in the LHC tunnel.___________________________________
From arstechnica.com - Safety report: latest collider at CERN won't end the world:
Physicists around the world are waiting with excitement as the final preparations for CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) take place in advance of the start of operations this summer. Others, however, are much less enthused, as they worry about the prospects for cataclysmic forces to be released through the exotic forms of matter that will appear in the debris of the collisions that take place within the LHC's detectors. Those worries sparked a lawsuit intended to block the LHC's operation. Physicists are aware of the concerns, however, and CERN sponsored a safety report back in 2003. Now, with final preparations for operation under way, they've issued a followup safety evaluation, updated in light of the progress physics has made in the intervening time. The report's conclusion is that, if the LHC were capable of destroying the earth, nature would have beaten us to the punch.
Black holes for everyone
The LHC Safety Assessment Group, which prepared the report, has provided both a fully referenced analysis and a version targeted for the general public (both PDFs). Those looking for a really condensed reason not to worry can find reassurance in the fact that, "each collision of a pair of protons in the LHC will release an amount of energy comparable to that of two colliding mosquitoes."
Those looking for more sophisticated reasoning will find plenty of it. At its most basic level, the safety assessment boils down to a probability calculation. The collisions in the LHC will have an energy content that's equivalent to that of a cosmic ray hitting the earth with an energy of 1017eV. We've measured cosmic rays hitting the earth with energies of up to 1020eV, meaning that we're really doing nothing new.
Of course, it's possible that the frequency of collisions in the LHC is so high that we might unmask an extremely low-probability event. Based on the frequency of high energy cosmic rays, however, the authors calculate that, "nature has already conducted the equivalent of about a hundred thousand LHC experimental programmes on Earth already—and the planet still exists." Those numbers go up when one considers the sun, which is a much larger target for cosmic rays. Backing out even further, to the entire visible universe, the calculations suggest that every second, there are the equivalent of 3 x 1013 times the total number of collisions expected over the lifetime of the LHC. If any of these resulted in the sort of cataclysms people are worrying about, we'd be seeing the explosions.
The LHC's collider ring covers several miles near the Swiss Alps
The report also looks specifically at some of the exotic species that are proposed for bringing about global destruction. Patches of lower vacuum energy are ruled out by the cosmic ray analysis, as, were they possible, "bubbles of new vacuum would have expanded to consume large parts of the visible universe several billion years ago already." Magnetic monopoles have also been mentioned, but calculations show that the dangerous ones are too heavy to be created by the LHC; anything light enough to be within reach of the collider would only destroy a total of one microgram of matter before leaving the earth.
Microscopic black holes are another popular source of doom, but the report lists a whole lot of issues with them. For starters, Relativity suggests that gravity is simply not potent enough to overcome all the other forces acting on particles during these collisions, and even if that weren't the case, Hawking radiation should cause any black holes of this size to evaporate immediately. The only possible exception comes through some forms of String Theory, but even those have problems. In any versions of the theory with greater than seven dimensions, the black holes would draw in matter so slowly that we'd have several billion years to worry about them; less than seven, and we would already have observed neutron stars and white dwarfs exploding.
One last problem comes from quantum mechanics. Any object formed through quantum effects can decay through exactly the same pathway, meaning that these black holes aren't actually black in the traditional sense; they should decay back to the particles that formed them quite rapidly. All in all, black holes seem to be pretty seriously ruled out.
Last up in the report's list of things not to lose sleep over are strangelets, atoms that, instead of the normal up and down quarks, contain some strange quarks. A strange quark outside of a nucleus has a half life on the order of nanoseconds, but there are some hypothetical strange atoms that might be relatively stable. In a hypothetical once-removed, these might convert other normal atoms to strange matter, setting off a chain reaction. Fortunately, there is no way to get this to actually work in a collider.
Strange quarks are only produced at high energies, but atomic nuclei can't form at these energies. The time it takes to cool down to the point where they could form is longer than the lifetime of a strange quark. As a result, "the likelihood of strangelet production in relativistic heavy-ion collisions can be compared to the likelihood of producing an icecube in a furnace." The continued inability of Brookhaven's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider to bring about the end of the earth is cited as further evidence.
Overall, it's hard to read this report and not wind up viewing the apocalyptic fears as simply being poorly thought through....
3 comments:
"apocalyptic fears... poorly thought through..."
"black holes... should decay... seem to be pretty seriously ruled out."
I don't see a single confirmed argument that reasonably proves safety from micro black holes with velocities too slow to escape Earth.
All of the "should" and "expected" safety arguments are challenged by credible scientists.
Even CERN's SPC Committee writes in their new validation report:
"A powerful argument applicable also to higher energies is formulated making reference to observed neutron stars, but this argument relies on properties of cosmic rays and neutrinos that, while highly plausible, do require confirmation, as can be expected in the coming years."
A reasonable safety step in my opinion would be to delay LHC operations until after the GLAST space telescope has the opportunity to attempt to confirm Hawking Radiation.
LHCFacts.org
With half of the 'Standard Model' missing, shrouded within a mathematical haze of pure speculation, and the LHC being built upn these antiquated precepts, there is no telling what awaits CERN! It will take the LHC discoveries to extricate the physics community, from their stagnated, depressing, and quagmired current positions! At least one sector of the 'Standard Model' will receive a tsunami of change, that will send the mathematicians and physicists scrambling wildly to install these new, much needed corrections! There is no doubt, that the future world desperate energy needs lie in LHC technologies; however, the production course should be traveled with extreme caution! The LSAG 'safety report' only covers lower energy 2008 'start-up' operation projections, and speaks nothing of the pre-planned decade to come, precision energy upgrades, set to begin in 2009! This report only covers previous public dockets of concern, and nothing toward the 'new' emerging risk assessment meetings, going on 'Behind Closed Doors'! CERN is grappling with multiple variance-calculation paradoxes, even as Michelangelo Mangano (and others) penned the expedited 'quiet the public' 'Safe Status' safety report! One such concern is: ALICE heavy (Pb) ion collisions, scheduled (once financed) for 2009. This project creates hyper-density plasmatic fields, which can affect a gravitational curvature, that could create a compression singularity vortex to form an event-horizon expansion. This is known as the: Einstein-Rosen Bridge wormhole: QUANTUM WORMHOLE! Director General Robert Aymar, Catherine Decosse (ALICE), Michelangelo Mangano, Stephen Hawking, CERN Theory Unit, and LSAG are in discussions, at this time!
IMPORTANT UPDATE: There is a CERN LHC Public Opinion Poll, at the web-link below. I decided to host a debate/poll, when I found out CERN personnel were scan-reviewing all articles, comments, threads, links,...etc., everything. So, make your vote count! Thanks! The Poll closes October 17, 2008.
http://www.volconvo.com/forums/science-technology/22661-cern-lhc-alice-atlas.html
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