Jump to content

Higgs Boson Discovery = Cosmic Doomsday?


DKT27

Recommended Posts

  • Administrator

N55ZBte.jpg
This is a graphical depiction of a particle collision inside the LHC's CMS experiment.

If calculations of the newly discovered Higgs boson particle are correct, one day, tens of billions of years from now, the universe will disappear at the speed of light, replaced by a strange, alternative dimension, one theoretical physicist calls “boring.”

Scientists last year announced they had discovered what appeared to be the long-sought subatomic particle that accounts for how matter gets its mass.

Analysis is ongoing to fully characterize the particle, known as the Higgs boson, and its related daughter, grand-daughter and cousin particles, all of which are needed to assure scientists that they’ve truly found what was once pure theory.

“It sounds too easy -- a particle with no spin and no charge. Like you made it up and yet there it is,” theoretical physicist Joseph Lykken, with the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Ill., told Discovery News.

So far, scientists have found nothing to indicate that the particle discovered last year at Europe’s Large Hadron Collider, or LHC, is not the Higgs boson with a mass of about 126 billion electron volts. It turns out that’s a critical number when it comes to the fate of the universe.

“If you use all the physics that we know now and you do what you think is a straightforward calculation, it’s bad news,” said Lykken, who also serves on the LHC science team.

“It may be that the universe we live in is inherently unstable and at some point billions of years from now it’s all going to get wiped out. This has to do with the Higgs energy field itself,” Lykken added, referring to an invisible field of energy that is believed to exist throughout the universe.

The calculation requires knowing the mass of the Higgs to one percent, as well as the precise mass of other related subatomic particles.

"It's right along the critical line,” said physicist Christopher Hill, also with Fermi.

“That could either be a cosmic coincidence, or it could be that there's some physics that's causing that,” Hill said.

Any life forms still around when the universe ends won’t have to worry about what’s coming -- it will unfold at light speed.

“You won’t actually see it because it will come at you at the speed of light and that’s it, so don’t worry. We know the universe is pretty stable because it’s been around for 13.5 billion years, so even before we did this calculation we knew that.

“This calculation tells you that many tens of billions of years from now there’ll be a catastrophe,” Lykken said.

“Essentially, the universe wants to be in different state and so eventually it will realize that. A little bubble of what you might think of an as alternative universe will appear somewhere and then it will expand out and destroy us. So that’ll be very dramatic, but you and I will not be around to witness it,” Lykken told reporters before a presentation at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Boston this week.

“There will be a new universe, a much more boring universe, so I hope this doesn’t happen,” he added.

:view: View: Original Article

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 5
  • Views 1.3k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

we'll be long gone before that happens :tehe:

hell, we might even trigger it for all we know...we are very good when it comes to destroying things after all :troll:

Link to comment
Share on other sites


interesting but scientists already figured out that we (everything) are expanding outwards

and not only that but we found out that we are expanding at a faster pace at any given point in time

AND even worse we expanding faster the further you go to the outer edges of the universe !

we though for ages it was all slowing down like when a grenade goes off but we learned because

of stuff like dark matter and dark energy the precise opposite is happening.

So this discovery sounds like more of the same conclusion to me..

Each solar system is spreading out and eventually one will not be able to see another.

Translation there will be less and less starts in the night sky until they are eventually ALL gone.

It will be a dark lonely place.

I'm sure we will be wiped out long LONG before any of this matters though.

We are just starting to scratch the surface of how dangerous and hostile the universe is.

Such as 20 years ago people laughed at the idea of black holes like comic book concepts.

We know know that there is MEGA blackhole at the center of our galaxy and more smaller ones roaming about randomly everywhere.

You may think well so what the odds of getting hit with one is minute but they don't need to come very close.

all it would take is to come close enough to our solar system and it would throw everything out of balance causing mass destruction.

And we are learning they are FAR more common than ever imagined.. they are found DAILY within our visible range !

Same situation with gamma ray bursts.. we find em daily and the can incinerate us all if they are close enough.

2004 told us that when we got hit by one that was far enough away (it set off nuke attack warnings around the globe)

It goes on and on.. If a comet or meteor gets us we're screwed.. if the sun burps up a CME etc we're screwed.

So yeah i have 100% belief we will all be long dead in less than hundreds of years never mind billions..

and if so then who cares screw what happens to the universe after we're gone lol

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...