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Author: Subject: anyone seen a blackhole yet
macspeedy

posted on 10/9/08 at 07:31 PM Reply With Quote
anyone seen a blackhole yet

9.15 am this morning

[Edited on 10/9/08 by macspeedy]

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macspeedy

posted on 10/9/08 at 07:34 PM Reply With Quote
hope he's right
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eddie99

posted on 10/9/08 at 07:37 PM Reply With Quote
If anything is going to happen, it will happen in roughly 2 weeks when they start colliding the atoms
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StevieB

posted on 10/9/08 at 07:40 PM Reply With Quote
Only when I look at my bank statement...
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Hellfire

posted on 10/9/08 at 07:46 PM Reply With Quote
The view outside our house earlier this evening. Nothing unusual.........

Phil








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StevieB

posted on 10/9/08 at 07:50 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by macspeedy
hope he's right


Particularly like Prof Brian Cox's reassurance

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clairetoo

posted on 10/9/08 at 08:07 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Hellfire
The view outside our house earlier this evening. Nothing unusual.........

Phil



Odd..........I've got the same sky here





Its cuz I is blond , innit

Claire xx

Will weld for food......

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Shadowcaster

posted on 10/9/08 at 08:33 PM Reply With Quote
Black Holes, got one of them things in the garage, swallows tools, screws, even the odd cup of tea. If a big one does open in a couple of weeks keep yer eye out for a snap-on screwdriver, dissapeared weeks ago.





Cheers Rich
The Roadster Blog http://richshaynesroadster.blogspot.com/
It does not matter how slowly you go so long as you do not stop.
Confucius Chinese philosopher & reformer (551 BC - 479 BC)

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RK

posted on 10/9/08 at 09:15 PM Reply With Quote
Time to call Superman. Do you still have phone boxes in the UK?
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Dusty

posted on 10/9/08 at 09:33 PM Reply With Quote
quote:

"Collisions releasing greater energy occur millions of times a day in the earth's atmosphere and nothing terrible happens.

Why don't the scientists study them rather than building their own toy. Seems a waste of money. And fairly poor green credentials with electricity bills of £14 million a year. I see sticky black footprints not black holes.

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Ben_Copeland

posted on 10/9/08 at 09:36 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by RK
Time to call Superman. Do you still have phone boxes in the UK?



Yes. but they are mostly used by drunk teenagers as toilets............





Ben

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vinny1275

posted on 11/9/08 at 07:59 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Dusty
quote:

"Collisions releasing greater energy occur millions of times a day in the earth's atmosphere and nothing terrible happens.

Why don't the scientists study them rather than building their own toy. Seems a waste of money. And fairly poor green credentials with electricity bills of £14 million a year. I see sticky black footprints not black holes.


Already been done - in another part of CERN there's a big detector thing that particles crash into and are studied, but you need the really high energy to be able to do it with any accuracy. Also, to detect what happens to particles colliding in the upper atmosphere, you'd have to lift all of those big heavy detectors into space - rocket fuel is v.nasty compared to the nice nuclear reactors they use in France..... And to lift that much into space would cost you way more than 10 billion quid.

Previous advances in physics like quantum theory made everday items like telephone switches and computer chips possible - who knows what we'll be using in 40 years time because of what LHC (or the diamond light source in Oxfordshire) finds?

Cheers


vince






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matt_claydon

posted on 11/9/08 at 08:08 AM Reply With Quote
^^^

Exactly, people deride experiments like this because they are expensive and have no obvious immediate benefit. But then neither did most of the science that led us to be able to build the things we take for granted today.

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martyn_16v

posted on 11/9/08 at 08:30 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Dusty
Seems a waste of money. And fairly poor green credentials with electricity bills of £14 million a year.


But if it helps to bring about an understanding that allows us to build, say nuclear fusion reactors that provide cheap clean energy for hundreds of years to come?






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motorcycle_mayhem

posted on 11/9/08 at 08:47 AM Reply With Quote
As a soon to be redundant scientist, still practising in the UK (just), I'm biased................ BUT I'd rather see tax dollars spent on this than pouring them into a black hole that has already been created (financial sector greed, just greed basically, debt, the State....).
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Benzine

posted on 11/9/08 at 08:56 AM Reply With Quote
This:

quote:
Originally posted by vinny1275
Previous advances in physics like quantum theory made everday items like telephone switches and computer chips possible - who knows what we'll be using in 40 years time because of what LHC (or the diamond light source in Oxfordshire) finds?



and this:

quote:
Originally posted by matt_claydon


Exactly, people deride experiments like this because they are expensive and have no obvious immediate benefit. But then neither did most of the science that led us to be able to build the things we take for granted today.







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macspeedy

posted on 12/9/08 at 08:40 AM Reply With Quote
COOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL

http://www.cyriak.co.uk/lhc/lhc-webcams.html
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