| Topic: |
Science > Physics |
| User: |
"Greysky" |
| Date: |
13 Jul 2005 11:55:11 PM |
| Object: |
The strange way Earth dies |
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few billionths of a
second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), this
energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma cools down
and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy forms of
matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced - this is
dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons
of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less then
a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long enough to
hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is), it
will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel and the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center of the
earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The strangelet will
release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and grows. Eventually,
there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star- at the earth's
center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the earth begins to
infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and converted into
a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one really
knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take years, or
be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to comprehend what is
going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our eventual individual
deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die in the strangelet.
There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting stronger as time
passes. They would occur regularly and eventually continuously. There would
be Tsunamis which would drown the populations near the shores of the earth's
oceans. Weather would be affected as well. The massive heating of the
planet's crust would permanently alter the ocean's currents and cause
violent storms unlike anything we can imagine today - and that would only be
the beginning. Changes to the planet would be terminal. Eventually the
energy released by infalling matter would cause the earth's core to expand
which would rupture the crust and release toxic gasses, and bubble magma
onto the continental plates, which would eventually sink into the ocean of
molten rock and killing most of the life on our planet. Eventually, as the
core gets absorbed, it will collapse back onto the strangelet and 'drain'
into it. Without anything to support it, what is left of the Earths' crust
collapses and is pulverized then liquefied and sucked into the strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be standing on
a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the earth's
mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be glowing
white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless strange
planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA seeking to
stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects have been
fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists have
been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how low does
it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total destruction
of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth. What
is your future worth?
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
.
|
|
| User: "Llanzlan Klazmon" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 12:13:17 AM |
|
|
"Greysky" <greyskyat@sbcglobaldot.net> wrote in
news:PemBe.2106$mN1.539@newssvr13.news.prodigy.com:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new
generation of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed
'strange' matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the
Earth. Looking into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that
this disaster scenario is in fact something that should be and has
been taken seriously by many responsible scientists and concerned
persons. First the scenario for disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to
operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms
into each other with such speeds that the energy released far
surpasses any nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first
few billionths of a second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum
Chromodynamics (QCD), this energy level should produce a quark-gluon
plasma. When the plasma cools down and begins to recondense into
matter, some unstable superheavy forms of matter with an excess of
strange quarks ought to be produced - this is dubbed a strangelet. If
the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons of normal matter
will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less then a
nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The
strangelet is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it,
producing electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the
electrons of an ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus
which then will be attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be
absorbed by it, feeding the strangelet and making it more stable and
able to absorb more atoms.
Dead on arrival. Far higher energy cosmic rays have been bombarding the
earth for billions of years. The Earth appears to have not been
destroyed yet.
Klazmon.
<SNIP>
.
|
|
|
| User: "Michael Baldwin Bruce" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 03:14:18 AM |
|
|
Bruce AKA Llanzlan Klazmon wrote:
"Greysky" <greyskyat@sbcglobaldot.net> wrote in
news:PemBe.2106$mN1.539@newssvr13.news.prodigy.com:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new
generation of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed
'strange' matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the
Earth. Looking into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that
this disaster scenario is in fact something that should be and has
been taken seriously by many responsible scientists and concerned
persons. First the scenario for disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to
operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms
into each other with such speeds that the energy released far
surpasses any nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first
few billionths of a second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum
Chromodynamics (QCD), this energy level should produce a quark-gluon
plasma. When the plasma cools down and begins to recondense into
matter, some unstable superheavy forms of matter with an excess of
strange quarks ought to be produced - this is dubbed a strangelet. If
the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons of normal matter
will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less then a
nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The
strangelet is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it,
producing electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the
electrons of an ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus
which then will be attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be
absorbed by it, feeding the strangelet and making it more stable and
able to absorb more atoms.
Dead on arrival. Far higher energy cosmic rays have been bombarding the
earth for billions of years. The Earth appears to have not been
destroyed yet.
Klazmon.
<SNIP>
Give the saucerheads time, Bruce.
.
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "Morituri-|-Max" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 03:35:41 AM |
|
|
"Greysky" <greyskyat@sbcglobaldot.net> wrote in message
news:PemBe.2106$mN1.539@newssvr13.news.prodigy.com...
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
So will an atom bomb going off, when it ignites earths entire atmosphere..
been there done that.
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "Captain!" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 06:54:55 PM |
|
|
"Greysky" <greyskyat@sbcglobaldot.net> wrote in message
news:PemBe.2106$mN1.539@newssvr13.news.prodigy.com...
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously
by many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario
for disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few billionths of
a second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD),
this energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma
cools down and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy
forms of matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced -
this is dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the
nucleons of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet
lasting less then a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter,
thus offering no danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different
beast. The strangelet is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum
surrounding it, producing electrons and positrons. The positrons will
combine with the electrons of an ordinary atom, exposing the positively
charged nucleus which then will be attracted to the strangelets negative
charge and be absorbed by it, feeding the strangelet and making it more
stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long enough
to hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is),
it will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel and the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center of
the earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The
strangelet will release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and
grows. Eventually, there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star-
at the earth's center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the
earth begins to infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and converted
into a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one
really knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take
years, or be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to
comprehend what is going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our
eventual individual deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die
in the strangelet. There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting
stronger as time passes. They would occur regularly and eventually
continuously. There would be Tsunamis which would drown the populations
near the shores of the earth's oceans. Weather would be affected as well.
The massive heating of the planet's crust would permanently alter the
ocean's currents and cause violent storms unlike anything we can imagine
today - and that would only be the beginning. Changes to the planet would
be terminal. Eventually the energy released by infalling matter would
cause the earth's core to expand which would rupture the crust and release
toxic gasses, and bubble magma onto the continental plates, which would
eventually sink into the ocean of molten rock and killing most of the life
on our planet. Eventually, as the core gets absorbed, it will collapse
back onto the strangelet and 'drain' into it. Without anything to support
it, what is left of the Earths' crust collapses and is pulverized then
liquefied and sucked into the strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be standing
on a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the
earth's mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be
glowing white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless
strange planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA seeking
to stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects have
been fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists
have been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how
low does it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total
destruction of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth.
What is your future worth?
Greysky
the apocalypse is (will be) upon us!
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "Greysky" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
17 Jul 2005 12:20:44 AM |
|
|
As a follow-up to my original post, here are some links to peruse:
Geologists searching past earthquake records for exotic mater impacts with
the Earth say two strangelets sailed through the earth moving around a
million miles per hour, in 1993:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2002%2F05%2F12%2Fwnugg12.xml
another take on the same event:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.02/matter.html
These guys are actually searching for Negatively charged Strangelets (lucky
for us they have yet to be sucessful in their endeavour):
http://citebase.eprints.org/cgi-bin/citations?id=oai:arXiv.org:hep-ex/9811049
These boys wanted to detect strangelets in the earths' atmosphere - too bad
they did'nt know about the 2003 impact in 1998 so they would know where to
look :-)
http://ej.iop.org/links/q69/4N5DUrMVyLoOKkVM,XNgfA/g905l1.pdf
I'm sure if there is NSF money in it, someone will look for strange matter
isotopes in cow dung.
Finaly, not to take up any more of your valuable time, this guy makes a good
argument that the Earth gets sprinkled by strangelet dust every 30 million
years or so, and that this is responsible for causing all those mass
extinctions:
http://www.barnesreview.org/July_2004/Archeoastronomy/archeoastronomy.html
While the chances for strangelet death may indeed be remote, that will be of
small comfort to the person whose head it falls on. It's all a matter of
perspective: What's wrong with being Drunk? Ask a glass of water.
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 09:30:16 AM |
|
|
Greysky wrote:
If the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons of
normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet
lasting less then a nanosecond will decay into normal
hadronic matter, thus offering no danger.
A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast.
The strangelet is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum
surrounding it, producing electrons and positrons. The
positrons will combine with the electrons of an ordinary
atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then
will be attracted to the strangelets negative charge and
be absorbed by it, feeding the strangelet and making it
more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Assuming these 'sparked' positron and electron pairs are
created near the strangelet, wouldn't the one of opposite
charge be preferentially attracted to the strangelet itself,
thus neutralizing its charge in either case?
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "Uncle Al" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 01:06:07 PM |
|
|
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
[snip]
Buncha crap. The most massive neutron stars are strange matter at
their scores. They are not physically different from your basic
smaller neutron star. Go shove an Ice-9 suppository.
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds
isnip]
Buncha crap. CERN's upgrade for boosting lead nuclei will surpass
center-of-mass PeV energies. Brookhaven is piddles. CERN's upgrade
is piddles compared to natural atomospheric interactions
http://www.fourmilab.ch/documents/ohmygodpart.html
Idiot.
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth. What
is your future worth?
Idiot. The world uterly ended at the stroke of 1900. There is
nothing to be lost in teh interval of the paperwork completing.
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Fucking imbecile.
--
Uncle Al
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/
(Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals)
http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf
.
|
|
|
| User: "The Ghost In The Machine" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 10:00:05 PM |
|
|
In sci.physics, Uncle Al
<UncleAl0@hate.spam.net>
wrote
on Thu, 14 Jul 2005 11:06:07 -0700
<42D6A98F.9D5DF7D6@hate.spam.net>:
Greysky wrote:
[snip]
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Fucking imbecile.
That old thing? Ye gods. He doesn't even have a proper circuit
schematic.
Still.
--
#191,
It's still legal to go .sigless.
.
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "TomGee" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 12:27:51 AM |
|
|
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
SNIP
A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons.
Interesting. But why does the strangelet spark the vacuum with its
mass? I don't see the connection there. And why should such sparking
produce electrons and positrons and not other particle types?
The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
And why should the atom be absorbed into the strangelet? Why would we
not expect the naked nucleus to gang up on it and destroy it?
.
|
|
|
| User: "nightbat" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 02:43:24 AM |
|
|
nightbat wrote
TomGee wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
SNIP
A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons.
Interesting. But why does the strangelet spark the vacuum with its
mass? I don't see the connection there. And why should such sparking
produce electrons and positrons and not other particle types?
The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Tom
And why should the atom be absorbed into the strangelet? Why would we
not expect the naked nucleus to gang up on it and destroy it?
nightbat
Theoretically created form of quantum matter, that's why they
call it a strangelet. It doesn't spark the vacuum with it's mass and is
not antimatter but pure base energy electromagnetic chamber shell free
plasma created nucleus chain reaction, contained initially as form of
newly created super or denser nucleus negative charged plasma. The
results would be potentially uncontrollable and devastating as Officer
Greysky points out for what could stop it? Everything around it suddenly
becomes technically fuel for its continued negative charged core atomic
atoms growing and regular matter absorbing existence. The humanity of it
all, everything, yes, even most of the coffee boys, all sucked in like
grapes to the center of the Earth. With only a few Earth Science Team
Officers and cabin boys permitted to safely escape via the 1st wave
Darla Star Ships. Yes, some will possibly be taken off and saved some
left behind, but all to watch as Officer Greysky reports scenario the
planet slowly caves in on itself.
ponder on,
the nightbat
.
|
|
|
| User: "Michael Baldwin Bruce" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 03:16:50 AM |
|
|
frootbat wrote:
nightbat wrote
TomGee wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
SNIP
A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons.
Interesting. But why does the strangelet spark the vacuum with its
mass? I don't see the connection there. And why should such sparking
produce electrons and positrons and not other particle types?
The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Tom
And why should the atom be absorbed into the strangelet? Why would we
not expect the naked nucleus to gang up on it and destroy it?
nightbat
Theoretically created form of quantum matter, that's why they
call it a strangelet. It doesn't spark the vacuum with it's mass and is
not antimatter but pure base energy electromagnetic chamber shell free
plasma created nucleus chain reaction, contained initially as form of
newly created super or denser nucleus negative charged plasma. The
results would be potentially uncontrollable and devastating as Officer
Greysky points out for what could stop it? Everything around it suddenly
becomes technically fuel for its continued negative charged core atomic
atoms growing and regular matter absorbing existence. The humanity of it
all, everything, yes, even most of the coffee boys, all sucked in like
grapes to the center of the Earth. With only a few Earth Science Team
Officers and cabin boys permitted to safely escape via the 1st wave
Darla Star Ships. Yes, some will possibly be taken off and saved some
left behind, but all to watch as Officer Greysky reports scenario the
planet slowly caves in on itself.
ponder on,
the frootloop
[insert coffee boy lame here]
.
|
|
|
| User: "Art Deco" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 10:31:13 AM |
|
|
Michael Baldwin Bruce <mbbruce@mighty.co.za> wrote:
frootbat wrote:
nightbat wrote
TomGee wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new
generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
SNIP
A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons.
Interesting. But why does the strangelet spark the vacuum with its
mass? I don't see the connection there. And why should such sparking
produce electrons and positrons and not other particle types?
The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it,
feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Tom
And why should the atom be absorbed into the strangelet? Why would we
not expect the naked nucleus to gang up on it and destroy it?
nightbat
Theoretically created form of quantum matter, that's why they
call it a strangelet. It doesn't spark the vacuum with it's mass and is
not antimatter but pure base energy electromagnetic chamber shell free
plasma created nucleus chain reaction, contained initially as form of
newly created super or denser nucleus negative charged plasma. The
results would be potentially uncontrollable and devastating as Officer
Greysky points out for what could stop it? Everything around it suddenly
becomes technically fuel for its continued negative charged core atomic
atoms growing and regular matter absorbing existence. The humanity of it
all, everything, yes, even most of the coffee boys, all sucked in like
grapes to the center of the Earth. With only a few Earth Science Team
Officers and cabin boys permitted to safely escape via the 1st wave
Darla Star Ships. Yes, some will possibly be taken off and saved some
left behind, but all to watch as Officer Greysky reports scenario the
planet slowly caves in on itself.
Doooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooomed! again, Bruce.
ponder on,
the frootloop
[insert coffee boy lame here]
Frootbatty is yapping again, Bruce? Looks like he is pushing hard for
a VVFWS.
--
Official Associate AFA-B Vote Rustler
"It's less a process of "convertion" it's about the reality of matter and
energy (all 8 [!] kinds of matter) ... and yes, that's how "they do it".
We {aliens} call it phase-tuning or simply phase-ing.
And no, you will have to find it out all by yourself. And yes, we
{aliens} will make sure your technical advancement will no longer be
faster than your spiritual one ... we'd rather let you perish on this
planet. That's a promise, you monkey-fu*kers.
HTH.
C."
-- Charles D. "Chuckweasel" Bohne's award-winning alien technology
"That's what you expect from people who think that the
cyberworld isn't "RL"."
-- Dr. David Tholen, Psychic Astrologer
.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "Double-A" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 12:26:30 AM |
|
|
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few billionths of a
second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), this
energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma cools down
and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy forms of
matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced - this is
dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons
of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less then
a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long enough to
hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is), it
will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel and the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center of the
earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The strangelet will
release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and grows. Eventually,
there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star- at the earth's
center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the earth begins to
infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and converted into
a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one really
knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take years, or
be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to comprehend what is
going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our eventual individual
deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die in the strangelet.
There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting stronger as time
passes. They would occur regularly and eventually continuously. There would
be Tsunamis which would drown the populations near the shores of the earth's
oceans. Weather would be affected as well. The massive heating of the
planet's crust would permanently alter the ocean's currents and cause
violent storms unlike anything we can imagine today - and that would only be
the beginning. Changes to the planet would be terminal. Eventually the
energy released by infalling matter would cause the earth's core to expand
which would rupture the crust and release toxic gasses, and bubble magma
onto the continental plates, which would eventually sink into the ocean of
molten rock and killing most of the life on our planet. Eventually, as the
core gets absorbed, it will collapse back onto the strangelet and 'drain'
into it. Without anything to support it, what is left of the Earths' crust
collapses and is pulverized then liquefied and sucked into the strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be standing on
a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the earth's
mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be glowing
white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless strange
planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA seeking to
stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects have been
fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists have
been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how low does
it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total destruction
of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth. What
is your future worth?
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Did you say, earthquakes, tsunamis, violent storms, and volcanic
eruptions?
I think it may already be too late, Greysky!
See the thread, "More Troubling Planetary News".
Double-A
.
|
|
|
| User: "nightbat" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 02:43:34 AM |
|
|
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few billionths of a
second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), this
energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma cools down
and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy forms of
matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced - this is
dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons
of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less then
a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long enough to
hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is), it
will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel and the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center of the
earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The strangelet will
release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and grows. Eventually,
there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star- at the earth's
center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the earth begins to
infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and converted into
a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one really
knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take years, or
be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to comprehend what is
going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our eventual individual
deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die in the strangelet.
There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting stronger as time
passes. They would occur regularly and eventually continuously. There would
be Tsunamis which would drown the populations near the shores of the earth's
oceans. Weather would be affected as well. The massive heating of the
planet's crust would permanently alter the ocean's currents and cause
violent storms unlike anything we can imagine today - and that would only be
the beginning. Changes to the planet would be terminal. Eventually the
energy released by infalling matter would cause the earth's core to expand
which would rupture the crust and release toxic gasses, and bubble magma
onto the continental plates, which would eventually sink into the ocean of
molten rock and killing most of the life on our planet. Eventually, as the
core gets absorbed, it will collapse back onto the strangelet and 'drain'
into it. Without anything to support it, what is left of the Earths' crust
collapses and is pulverized then liquefied and sucked into the strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be standing on
a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the earth's
mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be glowing
white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless strange
planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA seeking to
stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects have been
fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists have
been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how low does
it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total destruction
of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth. What
is your future worth?
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Double-A
Did you say, earthquakes, tsunamis, violent storms, and volcanic
eruptions?
I think it may already be too late, Greysky!
See the thread, "More Troubling Planetary News".
Double-A
nightbat
Yes, perhaps you're right Officer Double-A, now you know why the
urgency of the need for the Darla Star Ships. The planet is observably
rocking from enormous effects of possible negative nuclear runaway power
plant disaster and tests. Who knows, but the planetary signs are all
correlating to Officer Greysky's scenario, sad and very troubling
indeed. How much time do we have for instance before the Russian
cemented over failed nuclear power plant fuel leaks out and reaches the
center of the Earth is unknown? Or have nuclear scientist's already
actually created the pure negative charged nucleus and are trying to
contain it? Where did Officer Greysky get his secret technical
information from, the future? Or from scientific journals hailing their
undaunted progress towards strangelet matter creation?
ponder on,
the nightbat
.
|
|
|
| User: "Double-A" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 03:04:08 AM |
|
|
nightbat wrote:
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few billionths of a
second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), this
energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma cools down
and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy forms of
matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced - this is
dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons
of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less then
a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long enough to
hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is), it
will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel and the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center of the
earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The strangelet will
release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and grows. Eventually,
there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star- at the earth's
center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the earth begins to
infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and converted into
a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one really
knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take years, or
be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to comprehend what is
going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our eventual individual
deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die in the strangelet.
There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting stronger as time
passes. They would occur regularly and eventually continuously. There would
be Tsunamis which would drown the populations near the shores of the earth's
oceans. Weather would be affected as well. The massive heating of the
planet's crust would permanently alter the ocean's currents and cause
violent storms unlike anything we can imagine today - and that would only be
the beginning. Changes to the planet would be terminal. Eventually the
energy released by infalling matter would cause the earth's core to expand
which would rupture the crust and release toxic gasses, and bubble magma
onto the continental plates, which would eventually sink into the ocean of
molten rock and killing most of the life on our planet. Eventually, as the
core gets absorbed, it will collapse back onto the strangelet and 'drain'
into it. Without anything to support it, what is left of the Earths' crust
collapses and is pulverized then liquefied and sucked into the strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be standing on
a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the earth's
mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be glowing
white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless strange
planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA seeking to
stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects have been
fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists have
been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how low does
it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total destruction
of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth. What
is your future worth?
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Double-A
Did you say, earthquakes, tsunamis, violent storms, and volcanic
eruptions?
I think it may already be too late, Greysky!
See the thread, "More Troubling Planetary News".
Double-A
nightbat
Yes, perhaps you're right Officer Double-A, now you know why the
urgency of the need for the Darla Star Ships. The planet is observably
rocking from enormous effects of possible negative nuclear runaway power
plant disaster and tests. Who knows, but the planetary signs are all
correlating to Officer Greysky's scenario, sad and very troubling
indeed. How much time do we have for instance before the Russian
cemented over failed nuclear power plant fuel leaks out and reaches the
center of the Earth is unknown? Or have nuclear scientist's already
actually created the pure negative charged nucleus and are trying to
contain it? Where did Officer Greysky get his secret technical
information from, the future? Or from scientific journals hailing their
undaunted progress towards strangelet matter creation?
ponder on,
the nightbat
Much has been written about this, and concerns expressed, but no one
can stop these scientists from their headlong efforts to produce
stangelets and black holes!
These would be experiments better done on the Moon.
Although, I would miss the Moon.
Double-A
.
|
|
|
| User: "Captain!" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 06:57:15 PM |
|
|
"Double-A" <double-a@hush.ai> wrote in message
news:1121328248.183388.319680@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
nightbat wrote:
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new
generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken
seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario
for
disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to
operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms
into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses
any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few
billionths of a
second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD),
this
energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma
cools down
and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy forms
of
matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced - this
is
dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the
nucleons
of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting
less then
a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The
strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the
electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then
will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it,
feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more
atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long
enough to
hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is),
it
will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel
and the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center
of the
earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The
strangelet will
release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and grows.
Eventually,
there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star- at the
earth's
center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the earth begins
to
infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and
converted into
a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one
really
knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take
years, or
be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to comprehend
what is
going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our eventual
individual
deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die in the
strangelet.
There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting stronger as
time
passes. They would occur regularly and eventually continuously. There
would
be Tsunamis which would drown the populations near the shores of the
earth's
oceans. Weather would be affected as well. The massive heating of the
planet's crust would permanently alter the ocean's currents and cause
violent storms unlike anything we can imagine today - and that would
only be
the beginning. Changes to the planet would be terminal. Eventually
the
energy released by infalling matter would cause the earth's core to
expand
which would rupture the crust and release toxic gasses, and bubble
magma
onto the continental plates, which would eventually sink into the
ocean of
molten rock and killing most of the life on our planet. Eventually,
as the
core gets absorbed, it will collapse back onto the strangelet and
'drain'
into it. Without anything to support it, what is left of the Earths'
crust
collapses and is pulverized then liquefied and sucked into the
strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be
standing on
a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the
earth's
mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be
glowing
white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless
strange
planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the
new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA
seeking to
stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects
have been
fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists
have
been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how
low does
it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total
destruction
of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are
worth. What
is your future worth?
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Double-A
Did you say, earthquakes, tsunamis, violent storms, and volcanic
eruptions?
I think it may already be too late, Greysky!
See the thread, "More Troubling Planetary News".
Double-A
nightbat
Yes, perhaps you're right Officer Double-A, now you know why the
urgency of the need for the Darla Star Ships. The planet is observably
rocking from enormous effects of possible negative nuclear runaway power
plant disaster and tests. Who knows, but the planetary signs are all
correlating to Officer Greysky's scenario, sad and very troubling
indeed. How much time do we have for instance before the Russian
cemented over failed nuclear power plant fuel leaks out and reaches the
center of the Earth is unknown? Or have nuclear scientist's already
actually created the pure negative charged nucleus and are trying to
contain it? Where did Officer Greysky get his secret technical
information from, the future? Or from scientific journals hailing their
undaunted progress towards strangelet matter creation?
ponder on,
the nightbat
Much has been written about this, and concerns expressed, but no one
can stop these scientists from their headlong efforts to produce
stangelets and black holes!
These would be experiments better done on the Moon.
Although, I would miss the Moon.
Double-A
build one in space where there is no other matter close by.
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "Art Deco" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 07:53:08 PM |
|
|
Double-A <double-a@hush.ai> wrote:
nightbat wrote:
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new
generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken
seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to
operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few billionths
of a
second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD),
this
energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma cools
down
and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy forms of
matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced - this is
dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the
nucleons
of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less
then
a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The
strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the electrons
of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it,
feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long enough
to
hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is), it
will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel and
the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center of
the
earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The strangelet
will
release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and grows. Eventually,
there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star- at the earth's
center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the earth begins to
infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and converted
into
a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one really
knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take years,
or
be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to comprehend what
is
going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our eventual individual
deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die in the strangelet.
There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting stronger as time
passes. They would occur regularly and eventually continuously. There
would
be Tsunamis which would drown the populations near the shores of the
earth's
oceans. Weather would be affected as well. The massive heating of the
planet's crust would permanently alter the ocean's currents and cause
violent storms unlike anything we can imagine today - and that would
only be
the beginning. Changes to the planet would be terminal. Eventually the
energy released by infalling matter would cause the earth's core to
expand
which would rupture the crust and release toxic gasses, and bubble magma
onto the continental plates, which would eventually sink into the ocean
of
molten rock and killing most of the life on our planet. Eventually, as
the
core gets absorbed, it will collapse back onto the strangelet and 'drain'
into it. Without anything to support it, what is left of the Earths'
crust
collapses and is pulverized then liquefied and sucked into the
strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be standing
on
a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the earth's
mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be glowing
white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless strange
planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA seeking
to
stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects have
been
fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists have
been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how low
does
it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total
destruction
of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth.
What
is your future worth?
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Double-A
Did you say, earthquakes, tsunamis, violent storms, and volcanic
eruptions?
I think it may already be too late, Greysky!
See the thread, "More Troubling Planetary News".
Double-A
nightbat
Yes, perhaps you're right Officer Double-A, now you know why the
urgency of the need for the Darla Star Ships. The planet is observably
rocking from enormous effects of possible negative nuclear runaway power
plant disaster and tests. Who knows, but the planetary signs are all
correlating to Officer Greysky's scenario, sad and very troubling
indeed. How much time do we have for instance before the Russian
cemented over failed nuclear power plant fuel leaks out and reaches the
center of the Earth is unknown? Or have nuclear scientist's already
actually created the pure negative charged nucleus and are trying to
contain it? Where did Officer Greysky get his secret technical
information from, the future? Or from scientific journals hailing their
undaunted progress towards strangelet matter creation?
ponder on,
the nightbat
Much has been written about this, and concerns expressed, but no one
can stop these scientists from their headlong efforts to produce
stangelets and black holes!
These would be experiments better done on the Moon.
Although, I would miss the Moon.
Double-A
Improve your aim, Shirley.
--
Official Associate AFA-B Vote Rustler
"It's less a process of "convertion" it's about the reality of matter and
energy (all 8 [!] kinds of matter) ... and yes, that's how "they do it".
We {aliens} call it phase-tuning or simply phase-ing.
And no, you will have to find it out all by yourself. And yes, we
{aliens} will make sure your technical advancement will no longer be
faster than your spiritual one ... we'd rather let you perish on this
planet. That's a promise, you monkey-fu*kers.
HTH.
C."
-- Charles D. "Chuckweasel" Bohne's award-winning alien technology
"That's what you expect from people who think that the
cyberworld isn't "RL"."
-- Dr. David Tholen, Psychic Astrologer
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "nightbat" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 03:27:07 AM |
|
|
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote:
nightbat wrote:
nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
Scientists at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) have started to operate
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) which smashes gold atoms into
each other with such speeds that the energy released far surpasses any
nuclear reaction, and has not been seen since the first few billionths of a
second after the Big Bang. According to Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), this
energy level should produce a quark-gluon plasma. When the plasma cools down
and begins to recondense into matter, some unstable superheavy forms of
matter with an excess of strange quarks ought to be produced - this is
dubbed a strangelet. If the strangelet is positively charged, the nucleons
of normal matter will be repelled by it and any strangelet lasting less then
a nanosecond will decay into normal hadronic matter, thus offering no
danger. A negatively charged strangelet is a different beast. The strangelet
is so massive that it 'sparks' the vacuum surrounding it, producing
electrons and positrons. The positrons will combine with the electrons of an
ordinary atom, exposing the positively charged nucleus which then will be
attracted to the strangelets negative charge and be absorbed by it, feeding
the strangelet and making it more stable and able to absorb more atoms.
Once this process starts, there is no way to stop it. If the unstable
strangelet that is produced in the collider experiment lasts long enough to
hit the containment wall of the reaction chamber (where its food is), it
will become stable and permanent after absorbing as few as a hundred
protons. After mingling, and feeding within the containment vessel and the
superconducting magnets, it will begin a trip down towards the center of the
earth, eating atoms and getting larger all the way down. The strangelet will
release a lot of radiation as it gobbles up matter and grows. Eventually,
there will be the equivalent of a star -a strange star- at the earth's
center releasing horrendous quantities of energy as the earth begins to
infall in bigger and bigger chunks.
How long it will take for the entire earth to be absorbed and converted into
a lump of strange matter about the size of a 2 story house? NO one really
knows. It could take days, or months. No one thinks it could take years, or
be within mere hours- so we will have plenty of time to comprehend what is
going to kill us, and the nightmarish manner of our eventual individual
deaths. We would feel the effects well before we die in the strangelet.
There would be earthquakes, mild at first, but getting stronger as time
passes. They would occur regularly and eventually continuously. There would
be Tsunamis which would drown the populations near the shores of the earth's
oceans. Weather would be affected as well. The massive heating of the
planet's crust would permanently alter the ocean's currents and cause
violent storms unlike anything we can imagine today - and that would only be
the beginning. Changes to the planet would be terminal. Eventually the
energy released by infalling matter would cause the earth's core to expand
which would rupture the crust and release toxic gasses, and bubble magma
onto the continental plates, which would eventually sink into the ocean of
molten rock and killing most of the life on our planet. Eventually, as the
core gets absorbed, it will collapse back onto the strangelet and 'drain'
into it. Without anything to support it, what is left of the Earths' crust
collapses and is pulverized then liquefied and sucked into the strangelet.
If you were on the moon watching this, eventually, you would be standing on
a lone planetary body orbiting a lump of strange matter with the earth's
mass and having the size of a typical 2 story house. It would be glowing
white hot, but would begin to cool down, turning into a lifeless strange
planet in a few hundred million years.
The scary part of the story is that particle scientists say it is not
fiction - that every time they run a particle experiment using the new
generation of relativistic colliders, we run the small risk of having
exactly this happen. There have been several lawsuits in the USA seeking to
stop the indicated experiments until the analysis and risk effects have been
fully understood, but they have been dismissed in court. Scientists have
been saying the risk is 'very low' that this will happen. But, how low does
it have to be when you are talking about the complete and total destruction
of the earth and everything on it?
You decide how much your life and the lives of your children are worth. What
is your future worth?
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to build a FTL radio.
Double-A
Did you say, earthquakes, tsunamis, violent storms, and volcanic
eruptions?
I think it may already be too late, Greysky!
See the thread, "More Troubling Planetary News".
Double-A
nightbat
Yes, perhaps you're right Officer Double-A, now you know why the
urgency of the need for the Darla Star Ships. The planet is observably
rocking from enormous effects of possible negative nuclear runaway power
plant disaster and tests. Who knows, but the planetary signs are all
correlating to Officer Greysky's scenario, sad and very troubling
indeed. How much time do we have for instance before the Russian
cemented over failed nuclear power plant fuel leaks out and reaches the
center of the Earth is unknown? Or have nuclear scientist's already
actually created the pure negative charged nucleus and are trying to
contain it? Where did Officer Greysky get his secret technical
information from, the future? Or from scientific journals hailing their
undaunted progress towards strangelet matter creation?
ponder on,
the nightbat
Much has been written about this, and concerns expressed, but no one
can stop these scientists from their headlong efforts to produce
stangelets and black holes!
These would be experiments better done on the Moon.
Although, I would miss the Moon.
Double-A
nightbat
Many years ago I had a discussion with some Cern scientist's on
the net over this very matter, concerning possibility of matter anti
matter creation. They are determined to investigate the inner core
ground particles to the fullest. Always figuring what can a select
handful of observed researched particles cause. If Officer Greysky's
scenario becomes reality I wouldn't want to still be on planet Earth
when it happens. And move the experiment to the moon you say, still too
close to the only planet known which harbors life should something go
terribly wrong.
ponder on,
the nightbat
.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "Sam Wormley" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 12:34:37 AM |
|
|
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth.
The "new generation of atom smashers" is at least five orders
of magnitude less energetic that the atom smashing going on
right over your head!
.
|
|
|
| User: "Greysky" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 01:04:09 AM |
|
|
"Sam Wormley" <swormley1@mchsi.com> wrote in message
news:NPmBe.151056$x96.130227@attbi_s72...
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new
generation of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed
'strange' matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the
Earth.
The "new generation of atom smashers" is at least five orders
of magnitude less energetic that the atom smashing going on
right over your head!
True, except for the fact that those particles are by far hydrogen and
helium nuclei - much less massive. Also, the target, our upper atmosphere is
not relativistically accelerated. Those gold atoms are both moving into
each other at relativistic speeds. It also means the more powerful our
accelerators become, the bigger the danger gets. What is means is that the
human race probably has a bit more time to move these type experiments
off-world, where we wont soil our nest if things get goofy.
Greysky
.
|
|
|
| User: "FrediFizzx" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 01:34:09 AM |
|
|
"Greysky" <greyskyat@sbcglobaldot.net> wrote in message
news:tfnBe.2128$mN1.139@newssvr13.news.prodigy.com...
|
| "Sam Wormley" <swormley1@mchsi.com> wrote in message
| news:NPmBe.151056$x96.130227@attbi_s72...
| > Greysky wrote:
| >> There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new
| >> generation of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater
dubbed
| >> 'strange' matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy
the
| >> Earth.
| >
| > The "new generation of atom smashers" is at least five orders
| > of magnitude less energetic that the atom smashing going on
| > right over your head!
| >
| >
| True, except for the fact that those particles are by far hydrogen and
| helium nuclei - much less massive. Also, the target, our upper
atmosphere is
| not relativistically accelerated. Those gold atoms are both moving
into
| each other at relativistic speeds. It also means the more powerful our
| accelerators become, the bigger the danger gets. What is means is that
the
| human race probably has a bit more time to move these type experiments
| off-world, where we wont soil our nest if things get goofy.
Do you know what 5 orders of magnitude means? If extra compact
dimension exist, LHC at CERN might be able to make mini quantum black
holes when it starts up in a couple of years. If so, then they are
being made right now over your head. Do you have some whining to do
about that? ;-)
FrediFizzx
http://www.vacuum-physics.com/QVC/quantum_vacuum_charge.pdf
or postscript
http://www.vacuum-physics.com/QVC/quantum_vacuum_charge.ps
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "Sam Wormley" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 08:51:40 AM |
|
|
Greysky wrote:
"Sam Wormley" <swormley1@mchsi.com> wrote in message
news:NPmBe.151056$x96.130227@attbi_s72...
The "new generation of atom smashers" is at least five orders
of magnitude less energetic that the atom smashing going on
right over your head!
True, except for the fact that those particles are by far hydrogen and
helium nuclei - much less massive. Also, the target, our upper atmosphere is
not relativistically accelerated.
You are mistaken--the velocities are definitely relativistic.
.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "Martin" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 10:32:35 AM |
|
|
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
There's a report about them in the Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2002%2F05%2F12%2Fwnugg12.xml
"......
The two objects were picked up by earthquake detectors as they tore
through Earth at up to 900,000 mph. According to scientists, the most
plausible explanation is that they were "strangelets", clumps of matter
that have so far defied detection but whose existence was posited 20
years ago.
.......
The scientists looked for events producing two sharp signals, one as it
entered Earth, the other as it emerged again. They found two such
events, both in 1993. The first was on the morning of October 22.
Seismometers in Turkey and Bolivia recorded a violent event in
Antarctica that packed the punch of several thousand tons of TNT. The
disturbance then ripped through Earth on a route that ended with it
exiting through the floor of the Indian Ocean off Sri Lanka just 26
seconds later - implying a speed of 900,000 mph."
I sounds like just the sort of thing that we shouldn't even be
attempting to produce, accidentally or not.
.
|
|
|
| User: "Morituri-|-Max" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 11:56:14 AM |
|
|
"Martin" <martin_nospam@btinternet.com> wrote in message
news:42d6858f$0$1261$da0feed9@news.zen.co.uk...
There's a report about them in the Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2002%2F05%2F12%2Fwnugg12.xml
"......
The two objects were picked up by earthquake detectors as they tore
through Earth at up to 900,000 mph. According to scientists, the most
plausible explanation is that they were "strangelets", clumps of matter
that have so far defied detection but whose existence was posited 20 years
ago.
......
The scientists looked for events producing two sharp signals, one as it
entered Earth, the other as it emerged again. They found two such events,
both in 1993. The first was on the morning of October 22. Seismometers in
Turkey and Bolivia recorded a violent event in Antarctica that packed the
punch of several thousand tons of TNT. The disturbance then ripped through
Earth on a route that ended with it exiting through the floor of the
Indian Ocean off Sri Lanka just 26 seconds later - implying a speed of
900,000 mph."
I sounds like just the sort of thing that we shouldn't even be attempting
to produce, accidentally or not.
This is a joke, right?
.
|
|
|
| User: "Greysky" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 06:40:59 PM |
|
|
"Morituri-|-Max" <newage@sendarico.net> wrote in message
news:OOwBe.119570$j51.60472@tornado.texas.rr.com...
"Martin" <martin_nospam@btinternet.com> wrote in message
news:42d6858f$0$1261$da0feed9@news.zen.co.uk...
There's a report about them in the Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2002%2F05%2F12%2Fwnugg12.xml
"......
The two objects were picked up by earthquake detectors as they tore
through Earth at up to 900,000 mph. According to scientists, the most
plausible explanation is that they were "strangelets", clumps of matter
that have so far defied detection but whose existence was posited 20
years ago.
......
The scientists looked for events producing two sharp signals, one as it
entered Earth, the other as it emerged again. They found two such events,
both in 1993. The first was on the morning of October 22. Seismometers in
Turkey and Bolivia recorded a violent event in Antarctica that packed the
punch of several thousand tons of TNT. The disturbance then ripped
through Earth on a route that ended with it exiting through the floor of
the Indian Ocean off Sri Lanka just 26 seconds later - implying a speed
of 900,000 mph."
I sounds like just the sort of thing that we shouldn't even be attempting
to produce, accidentally or not.
This is a joke, right?
No, it is not. Most likely they were Positively charged strangelets, but
they were moving so fast the earth didn't slow them down much as they passed
right through. The danger is when these beasts have *no* velocity relative
to the planet - they will just fall to the center of the earth and sit there
spitting and sputtering as they eat matter. These things are definitely
real,and deadly if we do manage to make one...
Greysky
www.allocations.cc
Learn how to make your own FTL radio.
.
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "nightbat" |
|
| Title: Re: The strange way Earth dies |
14 Jul 2005 02:08:00 PM |
|
|
nightbat wrote
Martin wrote:
Greysky wrote:
There has been a lot of talk about how the operation of the new generation
of atom smashers may be able to make a kind of mater dubbed 'strange'
matter, and how this strange matter may in fact destroy the Earth. Looking
into the whole business, I was surprised to learn that this disaster
scenario is in fact something that should be and has been taken seriously by
many responsible scientists and concerned persons. First the scenario for
disaster:
Martin
There's a report about them in the Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fnews%2F2002%2F05%2F12%2Fwnugg12.xml
"......
The two objects were picked up by earthquake detectors as they tore
through Earth at up to 900,000 mph. According to scientists, the most
plausible explanation is that they were "strangelets", clumps of matter
that have so far defied detection but whose existence was posited 20
years ago.
......
The scientists looked for events producing two sharp signals, one as it
entered Earth, the other as it emerged again. They found two such
events, both in 1993. The first was on the morning of October 22.
Seismometers in Turkey and Bolivia recorded a violent event in
Antarctica that packed the punch of several thousand tons of TNT. The
disturbance then ripped through Earth on a route that ended with it
exiting through the floor of the Indian Ocean off Sri Lanka just 26
seconds later - implying a speed of 900,000 mph."
I sounds like just the sort of thing that we shouldn't even be
attempting to produce, accidentally or not.
| | |