LHC Doomsday Machine May Bring Time Travelers - Guise For Producing Anti-Matter That will Be Used To Flash Burn Off The Surface Of The Earth For Depopulation, Also Killing Vegetation And All Animals
The wormhole depicted in this story is not the time travel wonder that it is made out to be. This machine is for production of anti matter which will be used to flash burn off the surface of the earth for purposes of a faster, more sanitary way to depopulate the earth. There is time travel devices based on the second worm hole theory of a certain scientist, which is not exactly the same device. The real time travel machines can be fit into a tool caring box that easily fits in the back of a pickup truck. It is essentially two singularity engines placed side-by-side, running at the speed of light, with one engine running clockwise, and the other running counter clockwise. This disrupts gravity, which is connected to time. First there will be a wave effect, followed by disappearance, if viewing from the outside of the gravitational disruption. From the inside, the person who is doing the time traveling will see a rushing of white line speeding before him, much like the white lines on a highway, but close together. To stay on the same timeline it is necessary to stay traveling on the center line. The amount of time traveled must be calculated in order to land in a certain year and time. There are also windows of opportunity that must be used, like the ones that NASA uses to determine the Time that a shuttle will be launched. If you hear about an explosion on one of the military bases on the East Coast, this will be one of the early failed attempts at perfecting the techniques. This will be followed by a cover story. So who will get the blame this time? Will they blame the terrorists, or the aliens for this one? Maybe we should start a poll, or make wagers to whom will get the blame.
**************************************************** Click The Pic Below For LHC 3D Camera View! ****************************************************
Part 1 Russian scientists have claimed that time travel could take place this year(Aug 2008) as an inadvertent by-product of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) run by Cern, Mathematicians Irina Aref'eva and Igor Volovich said that when the LHC begins to smash atoms into each other the conditions will be perfect to open a wormhole into the distant future, "Proton-proton collisions at the LHC could lead to the formation of time machines (space-time regions with closed time-like curves) which violate causality" Segments taken from theduderinok's "light beings" coast to coast show with William Henry
Part 2
Could the late Carl Sagan be hinting us in his book ‘CONTACT’ that the aliens have instructed us to build this gigantic STARGATE LHC time travel machine?
1,21 gigawatts of electricity: Michael J Fox and Christopher Lloyd in the De Lorean time machine from Back to the Future
************************************************************ Time travellers from the future 'could be here in weeks' ************************************************************
Telegraph UK By Roger Highfield, Science Editor 06/02/2008
The first time travellers from the future could materialise on Earth within a few weeks
Physicists around the world are excitedly awaiting the start up of the £4. 65 billion Large Hadron Collider, LHC - the most powerful atom-smasher ever built - which is supposed to shed new light on the particles and forces at work in the cosmos and reproduce conditions that date to near the Big Bang of creation
Prof Irina Aref'eva and Dr Igor Volovich, mathematical physicists at the Steklov Mathematical Institute in Moscow believe that the vast experiment at CERN, the European particle physics centre near Geneva in Switzerland, may turn out to be the world's first time machine, reports New Scientist
The debut in early summer could provide a landmark because travelling into the past is only possible - if it is possible at all - as far back as the point of creation of the first time machine
That means 2008 could become "Year Zero" for temporal travel, they argue
Time travel was born when Albert Einstein's colleague, Kurt Gödel, used Einstein's theory of relativity to show that travel into the past was possible
Ever since he unveiled this idea in 1949, eminent physicists have argued against time travel because it undermines ideas of cause and effect to create paradoxes: a time traveller could go back to kill his grandfather so that he is never born in the first place
But, sixty years later, there is still no fundamental reason why time travellers cannot put historians out of business
But the Russians argue that when the energies of the LHC are concentrated into a subatomic particle - a trillionth the size of a mosquito - they can do strange things to the fabric of the universe, which is a blend of space and time that scientists called spacetime
While Earth's gravity produces gentle distortions in spacetime the LHC energy can distort time so much that it loops back on itself. These loops are known to physicists as "closed timelike curves" and they ought, at least in theory, to allow us to revisit some past moment
The scheme chimes with one laid out in 1988, when Prof Kip Thorne and colleagues at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, showed that wormholes, or tunnels through spacetime, would allow time travel, a scheme popularised by Carl Sagan in his novel - made into a film - Contact
Prof Aref'eva and Dr Volovich believe the LHC could create wormholes and so allow a form of time travel. "We realised that closed timelike curves and wormholes could also be a result of collisions of particles," Prof Aref'eva says
There are still plenty of obstacles for the likes of Dr Who, however. Not least of them is the fact that these are mini wormholes, so only subatomic particles are small enough to travel through them
They tell The Daily Telegraph that whether subatomic time travel in the LHC would open the doors for human scale time travellers "is a deep and interesting question" but stress that "these problems, and many others as well, require further investigations"
Probably the best we can hope for is that the LHC may show a signature of the wormholes' existence, Dr Volovich says. If some of the energy from collisions in the LHC goes missing, it could be because the collisions created particles that have travelled into a wormhole and through time
One sticking point until now for wormhole concepts is finding an exotic kind of material capable of keeping the maw of the wormhole open for time travel
Dark energy - a mysterious antigravity force that is thought to pervade the universe - could, they say, be just what is needed to keep the entrance to a wormhole open, at least according to one family of ideas about its nature, where it is called phantom energy
If a blend of colliding particles and phantom energy does create a wormhole in Geneva this year, an advanced civilisation could find it in their history books, pinpoint the moment, and take advantage of their technology to pay us a visit
"The observational evidence still allows for phantom energy," says Robert Caldwell, a physicist at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire "As for Aref'eva and Volovich's speculation that the LHC will produce the stuff of time machines - ugh!"
A leading scientist who believes that time travel may be possible, Prof David Deutsch of Oxford University, comments: "It's speculative in the extreme, but not cranky. For various reasons I don't think the mechanism they propose would work (i.e. provide a pathway for messages from the future) even if their speculations are true"
Dr Brian Cox of the University of Manchester adds: "The energies of billions of cosmic rays that have been hitting the Earth's atmosphere for five billion years far exceed those we will create at the LHC, so by this logic time travellers should be here already. If these wormholes appear I will personally eat the hat I was given for my first birthday before I received it"
Is the end of the world nigh? Doom-mongers fear the consequences of scientists replicating the Big Bang
Two nightmare scenarios, two ends of the world. In the first, there is little warning. For maybe a month there would be no sign that life was about to come to an abrupt and nasty end for all living things on Earth
Then, earthquakes would start unexpectedly, alerting geologists that something terrible, unimaginable, was amiss
After a few days, these seismic disturbances would reach catastrophic proportions
Cities would be levelled, the oceans would rise and wash in a series of mega-tsunamis that would attack the world's coasts, killing millions
The fact that the earthquakes were striking randomly, not along well-known geological faultlines, would be proof that something devastating was afoot
Finally, the end would come, in a disaster of Biblical scale. The Earth would literally start to crack up
Molten lava would wash over the land and the seas would start to boil
Mega-hurricanes would level buildings and forests the world over. Eventually, mountains would crumble as the Earth's crust continued to disintegrate
The fabric of the planet itself would start to disappear, trillions of tonnes of rock, water, air and life sucked into a whirlpool of unimaginable force
From space, our blue-and-white home would appear to vanish down a plughole in a flash of light
At least in this scenario we would have a little time, perhaps, to come to terms with the end
However, a second doomsday scenario is even more terrifying. There would be no warning at all
In an instant - about one-twentieth of a second - the entire Earth would simply vanish from space
Less than two seconds later, the Moon would follow suit. Eight minutes later, the Sun would be ripped apart, followed by the rest of the planets in the solar system and onwards, a wave of destruction caused by a rent in the fabric of space itself, spreading out from our world at the speed of light
Any extra-terrestrials out there would die too, in due course. And there would be nothing technology could do about it
But why should we now be worrying about such possible causes of Armageddon?
The answer is a gargantuan machine - the largest, most expensive scientific experiment in history, the 'Large Hadron Collider', to be turned on next Wednesday
Doom? The Large Hadron Collider CMS detector under construction
Although it was designed to answer the fundamental questions of life, some people have claimed that it could end up destroying the entire cosmos
This gigantic £4 billion-plus atom-smasher has been built under the Swiss-French border near Geneva, and is the most powerful device ever built for probing the secrets of the atom and the forces and particles which make up our Universe
It is a staggering device, occupying a train-sized tunnel 18 miles long, buried 300ft underground, studded with gigantic, cathedral-sized ring-shaped detectors where collisions between packets of 'heavy' subatomic particles, 'hadrons', will take place in the hope that the innermost workings of matter and energy will be revealed
The LHC is, arguably, the most impressive machine ever built by Mankind
But a few people are convinced that it should never be turned on. A lawsuit has been lodged at the European Court For Human Rights by a small group of maverick scientists
They claim there is a small - but not zero - chance that when the LHC is activated it will create either a mini-black hole which would fall into the ground and swallow the Earth from within (scenario one)
Or, even more bizarrely, trigger a catastrophic chain reaction in the very fabric of space and time itself, which would rip apart the entire universe like the skin of a bursting balloon (scenario two)
Bizarrely, this group, led by a German chemist called Otto Rossler, are using the European Convention on human rights to argue that, should the LHC destroy the entire Universe, it would 'violate the right to life and right to private family life'
In fact, since 1994, when the collider was first mooted by the multi-national European nuclear research organisation (CERN), a small number of doomsayers have claimed that by replicating the conditions pertaining at the start of the universe (Big Bang), about 13,700 million years ago, there would be a small but real risk an unstoppable cataclysm would take place
This is not a threat taken seriously by the scientists at CERN. When I visited the place a couple of years ago, to see the collider being built, any mention of mini-black holes and other risks elicited only raised eyebrows and shrugs of derision
The last elements of the Large Hardron Beam pipe and vacuum chamber in the ATLAS detector are installed. The ATLAS detector will search for new discoveries in the head-on collisions of protons such as extra dimensions and dark matter
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is an underground accelerator ring 27 kilometres in circumference at the CERN Laboratory in Switzerland. It will recreate the conditions at the birth of the universe by smashing protons together at incredibly high speeds
This computer generated image shows the 27-km LHC tunnel (in blue) on the Swiss-France border. The four main experiments (ALICE, ATLAS, CMS, and LHCb) are located in underground caverns connected to the surface by pits as deep as 150 metres
ATLAS (A Toroidal LHC Apparatus) is one of the six particle detector experiments at the Large Hadron Collider A small group of scientists fear the LHC could create a black hole that would swallow the Earth
The ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) detector with its magnet doors closed The LHC will use it to collide lead ions - hopefully recreating the conditions just after the Big Bang under laboratory conditions
The ALICE experiment's inner tracker is integrated. Collisions in the LHC will generate temperatures more than 100,000 times hotter than the heart of the Sun Physicists hope that under these conditions, the protons and neutrons will 'melt', creatingquark‑gluon plasma, which is believed to have existed soon after the Big Bang
Scientists assemble the last module of the locator for the LHCb (Large Hadron Collider beauty). This experiment seeks to find out why we live in a Universe that appears to be composed almost entirely of matter, but no antimatter It will do this by studying a type of particle called the 'beauty quark'
A technician walks under the core magnet of the CMS experiment (Compact Muon Solenoid). This will search for the 'Higgs boson'. Peter Higgs suggested that all particles had no mass just after the Big Bang. As the Universe cooled an invisible force field called the 'Higgs field' formed together with the 'Higgs boson'. Any particles that interact with it are given a mass Scientists hope this experiment will prove the theory
Workers dig tunnels where counter-circulating beams will be dumped. Travelling just a fraction under the speed of light, the beams at the LHC will each carry the energy of an aircraft carrier travelling at 12 knots In order to dispose of these beams safely, a beam dump is used to extract the beam and diffuse it before it collides with a radiation shielded graphite target
The LHC was not designed to destroy the universe, of course, but to fill in some of the embarrassingly large gaps that still run through our basic understanding of physics and how the universe works
It could discover, for instance, what most of the Universe is actually made of
The ordinary 'stuff' that we see around us - the atoms and molecules of water, carbon, iron, oxygen and the rest that make up our bodies, the planet Earth, the Moon, the other planets, the Sun and all the stars - actually accounts for only about one part in 25 of the total 'ingredients' of the cosmos
Astronomers know that something else, invisible and mysterious, must pervade every inch of space, its subtle gravity affecting the movements of the galaxy
This material - no one really has a clue what it is - has been dubbed 'dark matter' and it is hoped that the collider just might shed some light on what it is, perhaps uncovering a new type of particle
Perhaps more embarrassingly, we don't know what it is that gives even ordinary matter its mass
In the 1960s, British physicist Peter Higgs proposed the existence of a new particle, now known as the 'Higgs Particle', which effectively lends 'weight' to the stuff of the universe
So important and fundamental is this hypothetical entity that it has been dubbed the 'God particle'
It is hoped that if Higgs is right, the collider could finally clear up this mystery and, as a result of its super-powerful collisions, traces of this particle could emerge
That alone would, in itself, be justification for a large chunk of that £4 billion outlay. By simulating the Big Bang, it is hoped the LHC will act as a 'universe in a test tube', allowing scientists to examine a whole suite of exotic subatomic particles and forces and to go some way to completing the work started by Einstein and the other giants of 20th-century physics
So is there really a chance that the scientists have made a terrible miscalculation and that their new toy could inadvertently kill us all?
Happily, the simple answer is no. CERN's scientists have in fact commissioned several safety reviews (such as those that have taken place before other big particle accelerators have been turned on)
All have concluded that there is no measurable risk whatsoever. Perhaps the best argument against the LHC doomsday scenario is that cosmic rays - natural high-energy particles from space - smash into the Earth's atmosphere all the time with far, far more energy than will be generated by this machine
If it were possible to create a dangerous black hole by simply bashing atomic particles together, this would have happened naturally long ago, and we wouldn't be here to build this particle accelerator in the first place. So we are safe
In fact, what the scientists at CERN really fear is not the end of the world, but that their machine simply isn't big or powerful enough to uncover anything new - that to probe the deepest secrets of the cosmos they will have to ask for yet more cash to build something on an even greater scale
Either that, or their equations are simply wrong and a whole new approach is needed, despite the billions they have spent
Not a doomsday for Earth, perhaps, but a catastrophe for physics
As for the rest of us, we have to hope that the scientists have done their sums right - and keep our fingers crossed next Wednesday
The Large Hadron Collider - LHC at CERN Switzerland - is scheduled to start its engines on September 10, 2008
View of the CMS (Compact Muon Solenoid) experiment Tracker Outer Barrel (TOB) in the cleaning room The CMS is one of two general-purpose LHC experiments designed to explore the physics of the Terascale, the energy region where physicists believe they will find answers to the central questions at the heart of 21st-century particle physics
Assembly and installation of the ATLAS Hadronic endcap Liquid Argon Calorimeter The ATLAS detector contains a series of ever-larger concentric cylinders around the central interaction point where the LHC's proton beams collide Checks are performed on the alignment of the magnets in the LHC tunnel It is vital that each magnet is placed exactly where it has been designed so that the path of the beam is precisely controlled The ALICE Inner Tracking System during its transport in the experimental cavern and its insertion into the Time Projection Chamber (TPC) ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment @ CERN) will study the physics of ultrahigh-energy proton-proton and lead-lead collisions and will explore conditions in the first instants of the universe, a few microseconds after the Big Bang Insertion of the tracker in the heart of the CMS detector
Coast To Coast George Noory - June 07, 2008 Nuclear Physicist Walter Wagner expresses his concerns and lawsuit to delay the turning on the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. Earth may be in danger if the LHC proceeds without further investigation "The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) could allow it to become a black-hole factory with a production rate as high as about one per second" (part 1 of 4)
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************************************************************* Scientists sue to stop 'black hole' from sucking up Earth *************************************************************
Fear experiments could create 'vacuum' and consume planet
A European court says the idea a new supercollider project could create a "celestial vacuum" and eventually consume the Earth is worth discussing, but the project can move forward on schedule anyway
At dispute is what could happen should planned experiments at the supercollider built near Geneva by the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, go awry when the massive atomic particle smasher is fired up about this time next week
Several scientists led by spokesman Otto Rossler, a German chemist, have filed a case in the European Court of Human Rights seeking a delay in the project's opening while the potential problems are studied further
Rossler said in a report in the Telegraph that the sponsoring organization has admitted its work will create black holes – but it doesn't think that will be a risk. He has another opinion
"My own calculations have shown it is quite plausible that these little black holes survive and will grow exponentially and eat the planet from the inside. I have been calling for CERN to hold a safety conference to prove my conclusions wrong but they have not been willing," he said
WND also reported on an earlier lawsuit over whether the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, which is built to slam protons together at an unprecedented peak energy of 14 trillion electron volts, could spark, literally, the end of the world
Critics at that time had filed a lawsuit against the U.S. government and the CERN. A hearing is scheduled later this week in the case
Co-plaintiffs Walter Wagner and Luis Sancho said the collider could create black holes – or strangelets – that would grow and eventually consume Earth. A black hole is a region of space so dense that light cannot escape its gravitational pull. Scientists have not proved the existence of strangelets, a hypothetical cosmological object containing an exotic form of matter
Physicists at CERN and similar research facilities dismiss the doomsday claims as nonsense
And a spokeswoman for the European Court of Human Rights told the Telegraph the latest lawsuit, brought by Rossler and others, had been lodged but a petition for an emergency injunction against the project was rejected
"There will therefore be no bar to CERN carrying out these experiments but the applicants can continue with this case here at the ECHR," she said
The goal of the project is to re-create the conditions scientists believe existed in a fraction of a second after the universe was created. They are looking for evidence of the building blocks of life
The nearly $9 billion project has been funded by more than a dozen nations, and CERN spokesman James Gillies said "extensive safety assessments" have been completed
"The Large Hadron Collider will not be producing anything that does not happen routinely in nature due to cosmic rays," he told the Sunday Telegraph. "If they were dangerous we would know about it already"
Other colliders already have been operating for years, but the CERN project is raising questions anew because of its size. It is a circular tunnel about 300 feet underground that runs for about 18 miles. The more than 5,000 magnets inside are expected to accelerate tiny particles almost to the speed of light, dispatching them around the tunnel in one-11,000th of a second, according to the Daily Mail
The particles then will smash headon in collisions that will generate enough heat to melt a small car. Scientists hope the collisions will produce new scientific information
Rossler said the scientists sought court help because CERN operators are not taking "all the precautions they should be in order to protect human life".
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