http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/46186/
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Good work nerds. |
Woot.
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Now the blackhole creation begins.
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We really need to move the LHC and future projects way out into space such that we don't inadvertently destroy our race.
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And don't just put them on the moon, either. We're just as fucked if you split the moon in two as if you split the earth in two. Orbit it arround Venus or something.
--- How do they know that other solar systems or other galaxies aren't antimatter? From what I understand, anti-matter shouldn't behave in anyway different that we can observe from such distances...though I suppose electromagnetics might be reversed; still not sure how you'd observe that without setting it up, though... |
Dumbasses should just catch a Giratina and read it's pokedex entry...
What relevance does this even have to us as a species, anyway? |
Matter-antimatter annihilation releases a lot of energy, which we might be able to use if we can figure out a way to efficiently acquire antimatter. Plus it is cool.
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Science
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Isn't that all is ever has truely been?
I can't wait for time travel. Then we just go back in time, bring out tech with us, show them how to use/make it, then go to the future to discover --- lol, time travel is outdated. It's an infinate loop of us getting infinately smarter, until we're the one in UF--oh shit! I've got something, here! |
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The message you have entered does not contain significant content. Repeated bullshit posts will result in a ban. |
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The only reason it costs so much is because the technology isn't cheap, so technically it's a matter of both technology and money. They are interrelated.
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Here's the bottom line. That particle accelerator likely costs on the order of a trillion dollars. Look it up online and call me wrong, but this is an order of magnitude estimate. Putting that into space would theoretically cost more than the money that is in the world, when you factor in the mass-cost of putting anything into orbit. Again, this is something you can look up, but roughly the cost of putting anything into orbit is a function of its mass (aka the fuel required), and it is expensive as hell. This particle accelerator is one massive piece of equipment, and a ballpark estimate could easily be found by simply considering its size and assuming a uniform mass density. As if that was not a problem enough, if I'm not mistaken it operates by providing a massive amount of power to electromagnets. When this is in orbit, where will this kind of power come from?
When talking about feasibility of putting this into space, then you're looking at somewhere on the science fiction time scale when the human race has large naval space-faring vessels. If this ever happens, and shipyards are in orbit and have material carried to them on either a space elevator, or something much, much, much more efficient than current methods, then yes this could be built in space. Save science fiction though, this will not be in space in the next 100 - 200 years, and that's making the assumption that science lags science fiction on the subject of space travel much as it has for other similar subjects. By that time enough tests will have been conducted using this thing to know whether or not - by trial and error alone - it can destroy the human race. |
You could build it on the moon and launch it from there more easily. If it's in orbit around Venus, noone would care if it was powered by a big nuclear reactor (it's probably powered by nuclear reactors now, actually...).
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It's certainly within our means to do it, there's just not enough of a reason to, to the people that matter. Necessity breeds ingenuity. If we as a race wanted to do it bad enough, it wouldn't take long at all.
The main things that hold us back are bureaucracy and self-interest. |
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Maybe, if we're real lucky, people will want to do it!
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