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originally posted by: NightSkyeB4Dawn
I dreamt this crazy dream, just last night, and it involved CERN being used clandestinely as a "Stargate".
Serendipity?
originally posted by: Bedlam
originally posted by: NightSkyeB4Dawn
I dreamt this crazy dream, just last night, and it involved CERN being used clandestinely as a "Stargate".
Serendipity?
It might have been an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese, a fragment of an underdone potato. There's more of stirfry than of Stargate about it, whatever it is.
originally posted by: GetHyped
a reply to: Bedlam
So you're saying that the star gate will open up a realm of beef, mustard, cheese and potatoes? Hold my beer, I'm going in!
originally posted by: Bedlam
originally posted by: StargateSG7
In this case, I would start worrying about something
called Vacuum MetaStability... ...FALSE VACUUM turns into a more stable
REAL vacuum and that new lower energy state starts
expanding into the rest of the universe at the speed
of light turning ALL the fundamental and universal
constants onto their heads and therefore
DESTROYING ALL LIFE AND MATTER AS WE KNOW IT!
Cosmic rays can have much higher energy densities than LHC could ever muster, with the same particles. Doom porn...aborted.
Cosmic rays attract great interest practically, due to the damage they inflict on microelectronics and life outside the protection of an atmosphere and magnetic field, and scientifically, because the energies of the most energetic ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) have been observed to approach 3 × 10^20 eV,[5] about 40 million times the energy of particles accelerated by the Large Hadron Collider.[6] At 50 J,[7] the highest-energy ultra-high-energy cosmic rays have energies comparable to the kinetic energy of a 90-kilometre-per-hour (56 mph) baseball. As a result of these discoveries, there has been interest in investigating cosmic rays of even greater energies.[8] Most cosmic rays, however, do not have such extreme energies; the energy distribution of cosmic rays peaks at 0.3 gigaelectronvolts (4.8×10−11 J).[9]