GENEVA � The world's largest atom smasher threw together minuscule particles racing at unheard of speeds in conditions simulating those just after the Big Bang -- a success that kick-started a megabillion-dollar experiment that could one day explain how t
It'll get us another trillionth of a second closer to teh Big Bang, but not back to the moment of creation/destruction. Dark matter is BS. You heard it here first.
"Zipperfish" said It'll get us another trillionth of a second closer to teh Big Bang, but not back to the moment of creation/destruction. Dark matter is BS. You heard it here first.
It's amazing what physicists will come up with to make reality fit their theories. Dark matter, dark energy (we know it's there, but we have no way of detecting it). Then there's the idea of the multiverse. In one theory, every time a subatomic particle faces a choice between two states, a new universe is created so that both states can be met. Essentially an infinite number of universes.
Why can't they handle the truth? The universe is mental!
"andyt" said It'll get us another trillionth of a second closer to teh Big Bang, but not back to the moment of creation/destruction. Dark matter is BS. You heard it here first.
It's amazing what physicists will come up with to make reality fit their theories. Dark matter, dark energy (we know it's there, but we have no way of detecting it). Then there's the idea of the multiverse. In one theory, every time a subatomic particle faces a choice between two states, a new universe is created so that both states can be met. Essentially an infinite number of universes.
Why can't they handle the truth? The universe is mental!
I think that there could be explanations besides dark matter--for instance if Newton's Gravitational Constant is not, in fact, constant.
And, in defence of theoretical physicists, of all professions they are pretty much teh quickest at discarding one theory of reality in favour of another.
The theory to which you refer is the Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics--when a probability wave form collapses, a new universe is created for every potential outcome.
"Zipperfish" said Dark matter is BS. You heard it here first.
"andyt" said Dark matter, dark energy (we know it's there, but we have no way of detecting it).
Dark matter is reality. It's pretty much a done deal. If it weren't, we wouldn't keep finding it where theory predicts we will.
It doesn't reflect or emit radiation, but it does affect gravity. If it didn't , galaxies would spin stars out of their edges like special ed kids on a merry-go-round. So we can't see it directly, but we can measure it's effects indirectly.
As for LHC - it rocks! I can't wait to see what these low power experiments reveal! Or wait for another couple years to see what happens at full power!
It'll get us another trillionth of a second closer to teh Big Bang, but not back to the moment of creation/destruction. Dark matter is BS. You heard it here first.
It's amazing what physicists will come up with to make reality fit their theories. Dark matter, dark energy (we know it's there, but we have no way of detecting it). Then there's the idea of the multiverse. In one theory, every time a subatomic particle faces a choice between two states, a new universe is created so that both states can be met. Essentially an infinite number of universes.
Why can't they handle the truth? The universe is mental!
It'll get us another trillionth of a second closer to teh Big Bang, but not back to the moment of creation/destruction. Dark matter is BS. You heard it here first.
It's amazing what physicists will come up with to make reality fit their theories. Dark matter, dark energy (we know it's there, but we have no way of detecting it). Then there's the idea of the multiverse. In one theory, every time a subatomic particle faces a choice between two states, a new universe is created so that both states can be met. Essentially an infinite number of universes.
Why can't they handle the truth? The universe is mental!
I think that there could be explanations besides dark matter--for instance if Newton's Gravitational Constant is not, in fact, constant.
And, in defence of theoretical physicists, of all professions they are pretty much teh quickest at discarding one theory of reality in favour of another.
The theory to which you refer is the Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics--when a probability wave form collapses, a new universe is created for every potential outcome.
Dark matter is BS. You heard it here first.
Dark matter, dark energy (we know it's there, but we have no way of detecting it).
Dark matter is reality. It's pretty much a done deal. If it weren't, we wouldn't keep finding it where theory predicts we will.
It doesn't reflect or emit radiation, but it does affect gravity. If it didn't , galaxies would spin stars out of their edges like special ed kids on a merry-go-round. So we can't see it directly, but we can measure it's effects indirectly.
http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2006/1e0657/
http://news.discovery.com/space/hubble- ... atter.html
http://www.flickr.com/photos/nasacolab/2907661913/
And the kicker:
http://minnesota.publicradio.org/displa ... rk-matter/
As for LHC - it rocks! I can't wait to see what these low power experiments reveal! Or wait for another couple years to see what happens at full power!