Hadron collider CERN
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day
The Time in Sydney is 10.54am Tuesday
The Time in Sydney is 10.54am Tuesday
Harry : Smile and live another day.
Re: Hadron collider CERN
I think this gravy train has finally finished.Sorry Orca that I can no longer tolerate long-winded misplaced authorities, self-righteous pontifications, outright lies, scientific untruths, outrages against true science and accusations of 'folks like you'. It is clear that you are a pontificator and outright accuser. You would, in a court of law, be convicted of libel and slander. It is also clear that your religiosity in the name of science interferes drastically and exceptionally harmfully to the processes of free speech and free intellect. It appears you, and whoever will support you in your statements, are doomed to wander in darkness until you begin to admit you are not seeing light and scientific truth. I will be banned from this site because of your long relationship with the moderators who seem to find comfortable enjoyment and perverse pleasure hiding behind and using improperly and without hint of conscience their delete buttons. Some be it .. the false religion of Big Bang and Theory is Fact will be seen for what it is, a true darkness which the Northstar will shine against until the end of this creation. Join true freedom of thought and expression, apod forum, or stay lost in darkness which fewer and fewer viewers find inclined to participate in. Search the record .. two or three or no posts each day unless the posts are contention and argument and name calling between Chris Peterson and a couple others. You and yours have banned yourselves from intelligent thought and action .. with your moderator issuing Board Warnings without even bothering to mention what the warning is for. True Facist action in the finiest Nazi tradition, wouldn't you say? And right there at NASA. Such a shame, and no need to wonder why, with that kind of mentality, why NASA has repeated catastrophic failures of its equipment. Shame on you for allowing such catastrophes for the sake of your religiosity .. you are the priests of doom.
I think it's interesting to note that within only a few exchanges you have shown such emotional responses that you've revealed the weakness of your own position. How about a helpful suggestion. For one, if you are going to call someone an "outright accuser" and tell them they are guilty of "libel" and "slander," it would help your argument if you didn't refer to the individual as a "Nazi" and "Priest of Doom" in the same paragraph.
As for censorship, no one is saying you can't think and say what you want. There are plenty of places for you to talk about UFO's and Conspiracy Theories. These subjects simply lie outside the scope of this board according to the rules.
As for my alignment with the admins, there is none, other than the fact that I follow the rules. I'm sure you read them before you started posting here.
As for the heavy-handedness of the admins, you can see that not one has posted in the few days you've been here. I am not even sure how many actively participate these days. At any rate, anyone who's been banned has had plenty of warning.
I am not going to comment on this particular thread again. I apologize to the APOD community for how ugly it's gotten; sometimes the fight to keep the board on task does more damage than good.
Northstar, good luck. As I said, enjoy your stay.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
Hello Orca
I like your words, well written.
Cool and collective
I like your words, well written.
Cool and collective
Harry : Smile and live another day.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day from the land of ozzzzzz
I'm just reading through some recent papers on Higgs Boson and the LHC. Please I'm not posting these links for discussion. Just sharing the reading. The complexity of quantum mechanics is enough to give you pain where the sun don't shine.
One of the most WANTED is the Higgs Boson, darn little fellar is hidden.
http://arxiv.org/abs/0909.5576
Extracting the fundamental parameters
Authors: Dirk Zerwas
(Submitted on 30 Sep 2009)
oops next link
I'm just reading through some recent papers on Higgs Boson and the LHC. Please I'm not posting these links for discussion. Just sharing the reading. The complexity of quantum mechanics is enough to give you pain where the sun don't shine.
One of the most WANTED is the Higgs Boson, darn little fellar is hidden.
http://arxiv.org/abs/0909.5576
Extracting the fundamental parameters
Authors: Dirk Zerwas
(Submitted on 30 Sep 2009)
andAbstract: If supersymmetry is discovered at the LHC, the extraction of the fundamental parameters will be a formidable task. In such a system where measurements depend on different combinations of the parameters in a highly correlated system, the identification of the true parameter set in an efficient way necessitates the development and use of sophisticated methods. A rigorous treatment of experimental and theoretical errors is necessary to determine the precision of the measurement of the fundamental parameters. The techniques developed for this endeavor can also be applied to similar problems such as the determination of the Higgs boson couplings at the LHC.
oops next link
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day
Update on the LHC
http://lhc.web.cern.ch/lhc/
Large Hadron Collider nuclear scientist charged with terror offences
13 Oct 2009
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-storie ... -21743486/
The Collider, the Particle and a Theory About Fate
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/13/scien ... 13lhc.html
Update on the LHC
http://lhc.web.cern.ch/lhc/
Large Hadron Collider nuclear scientist charged with terror offences
13 Oct 2009
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-storie ... -21743486/
The poor guy was just trying to find a black hole.A French judge filed preliminary charges against the scientist who works at the Large Hadron Collider, the world's largest atom smasher.
The 32-year-old Frenchman, of Algerian origin, is suspected of involvement with al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, a North African group.
The Collider, the Particle and a Theory About Fate
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/13/scien ... 13lhc.html
More than a year after an explosion of sparks, soot and frigid helium shut it down, the world’s biggest and most expensive physics experiment, known as the Large Hadron Collider, is poised to start up again. In December, if all goes well, protons will start smashing together in an underground racetrack outside Geneva in a search for forces and particles that reigned during the first trillionth of a second of the Big Bang.
Their work is fantastic as for the BBT and Time travel, you can wait for santa clause.Then it will be time to test one of the most bizarre and revolutionary theories in science. I’m not talking about extra dimensions of space-time, dark matter or even black holes that eat the Earth. No, I’m talking about the notion that the troubled collider is being sabotaged by its own future. A pair of otherwise distinguished physicists have suggested that the hypothesized Higgs boson, which physicists hope to produce with the collider, might be so abhorrent to nature that its creation would ripple backward through time and stop the collider before it could make one, like a time traveler who goes back in time to kill his grandfather.
Harry : Smile and live another day.
Re: Hadron collider CERN
Thanks, Harry
I find it very disturbing that CERN would employ a physicist with links to al-Quaeda.
The NY Times article was interesting and somewhat amusing (Is that why they call the Higgs boson the God Particle?). It also included a link to a well written June 2005 article on time travel that was fun, informative, and surprisingly current.
I find it very disturbing that CERN would employ a physicist with links to al-Quaeda.
The NY Times article was interesting and somewhat amusing (Is that why they call the Higgs boson the God Particle?). It also included a link to a well written June 2005 article on time travel that was fun, informative, and surprisingly current.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
I doubt it was on his resume!bystander wrote:I find it very disturbing that CERN would employ a physicist with links to al-Quaeda.
Seriously, a high percentage of terrorists have backgrounds in science or engineering, and are highly intelligent. I'm sure there are a few scientists with sympathies in such directions to be found in large academic projects everywhere. It's not like they are planning on sabotaging these projects; even a terrorist needs a day job. (And it isn't clear this guy was actually a terrorist, as opposed to somebody just sympathetic to the al-Qaeda position.) I'll bet if you looked closely enough, you'd find a few scientists who are child molesters and thieves as well. Lets hope this incident doesn't mean that anybody looking for a research job will need a deep background check and security clearance.
Chris
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
To be fair, he didn't work for CERN, but for a contractor doing analysis work. Here's a perspective piece from Nature.Chris Peterson wrote:I doubt it was on his resume!
UK Press + CERN arrests + al-Qaeda = Cold fusion?
Nature.com - October 12, 2009
However, I would think that as expensive as the LHC is, and as high profile, I would expect background checks and security clearances to be required, de jure if not de facto. Maybe not at the level that would have been required to expose this, but still ....
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day
Now what's wrong with being a terrorists?
My mum used to call me a little terror.
Now my wife calls me a terrible person sometimes.
Now what's wrong with being a terrorists?
My mum used to call me a little terror.
Now my wife calls me a terrible person sometimes.
Harry : Smile and live another day.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
harry wrote:Now what's wrong with being a terrorists?
harry wrote:My mum used to call me a little terror.
Sorry m8,, I Fail to find The above text useful.
WIMPS?
Any other Reasonings, behind the word WIMPS?
What other undiscovered Matter Can pass through the earth, without been seen?
Complete opposite universe created this universe? Every particle in this universe, is a gate way to the inner universe?
Notes: Matter Seems to be in semi, matter/energy state? Half matter half nothing. When talking of wimps
Notes: If matter can exist in a semi state then ,, Matter has two extreams which it plays a role in both.
Notes: If Energy was converted to matter, And only 5% exits from after the anti matter killing zone,, in planck.. I really would not want to open the other hidden 95% energy that went back to our universes anti shadow.
Mark
Always trying to find the answers
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day Mark
The text was not useful at all,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,it was a joke related to the previous post.
But! you said
Do you know what WIMPS are?
Do you know the phases of matter not just normal matter but! the phases of nuclear matter?
The text was not useful at all,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,it was a joke related to the previous post.
But! you said
What are you trying to say?Any other Reasonings, behind the word WIMPS?
What other undiscovered Matter Can pass through the earth, without been seen?
Complete opposite universe created this universe? Every particle in this universe, is a gate way to the inner universe?
Notes: Matter Seems to be in semi, matter/energy state? Half matter half nothing. When talking of wimps
Notes: If matter can exist in a semi state then ,, Matter has two extreams which it plays a role in both.
Notes: If Energy was converted to matter, And only 5% exits from after the anti matter killing zone,, in planck.. I really would not want to open the other hidden 95% energy that went back to our universes anti shadow.
Do you know what WIMPS are?
Do you know the phases of matter not just normal matter but! the phases of nuclear matter?
Harry : Smile and live another day.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
harry wrote:Do you know what WIMPS are?
http://hepwww.rl.ac.uk/UKDMC/dark_matter/wimp.html
errrr Yeah
What else are we Blind too?
Mark
Always trying to find the answers
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
Hi Folks
I got this touch paper... I have no Idea What will happen,, anybody wanna help me light this fuse?
We know the Bang came from Nothing.. how can you discover that bang,, without making another big bang?
Mark
I got this touch paper... I have no Idea What will happen,, anybody wanna help me light this fuse?
We know the Bang came from Nothing.. how can you discover that bang,, without making another big bang?
Mark
Always trying to find the answers
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
We know no such thing, and very few cosmologists even consider that likely.mark swain wrote:We know the Bang came from Nothing..
Chris
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day from the land of oz
In recent years S Hawking has shift his thinking from a BIG BANG to a recycling Big Bang, not as a total universe, but as unit universes.
======================================
Knowing what WIMPS are is different to knowing what WIMPS look like. Can we dect them and find them? The LHC has a lot of work ahead of it and its all in a little nano packet.
http://arxiv.org/abs/0907.4374
Can we discover multi-component WIMP dark matter?
Authors: Stefano Profumo (UCSC), Kris Sigurdson (UBC), Lorenzo Ubaldi (UCSC)
(Submitted on 25 Jul 2009 (v1), last revised 8 Oct 2009 (this version, v2))
In recent years S Hawking has shift his thinking from a BIG BANG to a recycling Big Bang, not as a total universe, but as unit universes.
======================================
Knowing what WIMPS are is different to knowing what WIMPS look like. Can we dect them and find them? The LHC has a lot of work ahead of it and its all in a little nano packet.
http://arxiv.org/abs/0907.4374
Can we discover multi-component WIMP dark matter?
Authors: Stefano Profumo (UCSC), Kris Sigurdson (UBC), Lorenzo Ubaldi (UCSC)
(Submitted on 25 Jul 2009 (v1), last revised 8 Oct 2009 (this version, v2))
Abstract: We address the question of whether the upcoming generation of dark matter search experiments and colliders will be able to discover if the dark matter in the Universe has more than one weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) component. We outline a model-independent approach, and we study the specific cases of (1) indirect detection of dark matter via the discovery of gamma-ray lines corresponding to direct dark matter annihilation into monochromatic gamma rays, (2) direct detection with low-background 0.1 and 1 ton noble-gas detectors and (3) a 0.5 TeV center of mass energy electron-positron linear collider. For each search "channel", we outline a few assumptions to relate the very small set of parameters we consider (defining the masses of the two WIMPs and their relative abundance in the overall dark matter density) with the relevant detection rates. We then draw general conclusions on which corners of a generic multi-partite dark matter scenario can be explored with current and next generation experiments. We find that in all channels the ideal setup is one where the relative mass splitting between the two WIMP species is of order 1, and where the two dark matter components contribute in a ratio close to 1:1 to the overall dark matter content of the Universe. Interestingly, in the case of direct detection, future experiments might detect multiple states even if only ~10% of the energy-density of dark matter in the Universe is in the subdominant species.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
Chris Peterson wrote:We know no such thing, and very few cosmologists even consider that likely.mark swain wrote:We know the Bang came from Nothing..
http://www.astronomycafe.net/qadir/q1326.html
Looks pretty much like nothing to me,, 100 trillion times smaller than the nucleus of an Atom...
There is more space inside a pin head than a hundred billion universes.
Always trying to find the answers
Re: Hadron collider CERN
The scales of smallest to largest in the universe never cease to amaze me. While 100 trillion times smaller than an atomic nucleus is unfathomably tiny, it is not absolutely nothing.mark swain wrote: Looks pretty much like nothing to me,, 100 trillion times smaller than the nucleus of an Atom...
There is more space inside a pin head than a hundred billion universes.
It is astounding to conceive of the universe originating in something so infinitesimal but so many things about the universe astound me that I guess this is just one more!!!
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day from the land of ozzzz
You cannot create matter, it has always been there in one form or another.
As for the ability to compact.
Imagine the solar system with the Sun being the Nucleus and pluto being the electron.
How many Pluto's can you fit into the solar System.
That will give you some idea of how matter can be compacted.
To uncompact matter is one of the most interesting processes that scientists today are researching.
You cannot create matter, it has always been there in one form or another.
As for the ability to compact.
Imagine the solar system with the Sun being the Nucleus and pluto being the electron.
How many Pluto's can you fit into the solar System.
That will give you some idea of how matter can be compacted.
To uncompact matter is one of the most interesting processes that scientists today are researching.
Harry : Smile and live another day.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
Unless there is no compacting to be done,,, Look at the gears on a push bike.. 5 gears all different sizes.... if those gears were different dimensions.. take 1 Atom from the fifth gear, and let it go in the first gear .....Dimensions being the key..harry wrote:To uncompact matter is one of the most interesting processes that scientists today are researching.
If a glass marble is stable in our dimension,, move it to another dimension and it becomes a bomb.
Always trying to find the answers
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day Mark Swain
Did you know that most of the matter in the universe is in a form of ultra dense matter?
Did you know that most of the matter in the universe is in a form of ultra dense matter?
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
No,, I was aware that most of our universe was full of dark matter, and dark energy... And I am trying to understand it.harry wrote:G'day Mark Swain
Did you know that most of the matter in the universe is in a form of ultra dense matter?
Although I do not think it is entirely correct ...In ways that we can not understand yet
Always trying to find the answers
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day Mark Swain
Dark matter and Dark Energy have many definitons from various models.
Research condensed matter, ultra dense matter. You can use arXiv or ADS or what ever or Google.
I would give you info on it, but! self discovery is great.
Darn, forgot the kids. Its Saturday Tennis
Got to gooooooooooooo.
Dark matter and Dark Energy have many definitons from various models.
Research condensed matter, ultra dense matter. You can use arXiv or ADS or what ever or Google.
I would give you info on it, but! self discovery is great.
Darn, forgot the kids. Its Saturday Tennis
Got to gooooooooooooo.
Last edited by harry on Sat Oct 17, 2009 7:44 am, edited 1 time in total.
Harry : Smile and live another day.
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
That is false. Nearly all the matter in the Universe is in the form of dark matter, which is not dense. And even when talking about ordinary matter, only a tiny fraction is in a compressed state.harry wrote:Did you know that most of the matter in the universe is in a form of ultra dense matter?
Chris
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
totally agree with you chris... But, there is a lot more to it, which we do not understand
Always trying to find the answers
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Re: Hadron collider CERN
G'day Chris
To this date no dark matter or energy has been observed as noted by the BBT.
Although the discussion of dark matter and dark energy in compact matter has been written in many papers.
Do a bit of reading on the subject.
Most matter is found at the centre of Stars, and other compact objects such as exotic stars and black holes (without a singularity)
To this date no dark matter or energy has been observed as noted by the BBT.
Although the discussion of dark matter and dark energy in compact matter has been written in many papers.
Do a bit of reading on the subject.
Most matter is found at the centre of Stars, and other compact objects such as exotic stars and black holes (without a singularity)
Harry : Smile and live another day.