Anonymous ID: dadd93 March 8, 2018, 7:37 a.m. No.588319   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8395 >>8437 >>8676

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March 6, 2018

Blog, CERN, Features, Reviews

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CERN Suffers MASSIVE Explosion

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Last Tuesday, an experiment gone awry killed three scientists and caused catastrophic damage to the planet’s largest super-collider, known as project CERN, a nefarious coalition of politically controlled scientists eager to subvert scientific achievements in the name of furthering ominous ventures that threaten humanity.

 

Dr. Ravi Mutnaj, a New Delhi based physicist formerly attached to CERN, said the incident occurred when scientists tried to enhance the collider’s magnetic coils by adding an additional eighteen hundred super magnets to the existing ninety-six hundred. The combined pull of the magnets, in conjunction with nine thousand filaments of magnetized cable, generate a force over 100,000 times more powerful than the gravitational pull of Earth. Dr. Mutnaj said the accident occurred as the scientists attempted to create an interdiminsial gateway—or portal—to a parallel universe. As protons fired across a seventeen-mile circular track six hundred feet beneath the ground, he said, temperatures rose to unprecedented levels, which caused a cascading system failure and a detonation that instantly obliterated a five mile stretch of the track and incinerated the trio of scientists working on the project.

 

“There was massive damage to the hadron collider,” Dr. Mutnaj said. “For now, CERN is effectively shut down. From what I hear, it will take at least seven months to repair the damaged section. These people are devious and despite the loss of life, humanity is better off with CERN offline. To create their portal, they wanted to accelerate and collide three beams of ions.”

 

The portal, he added, opened shortly before temperatures approaching 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit vaporized the scientists and part of the facility. The masterminds behind CERN believe portals are necessary in case Earth becomes uninhabitable; the gateways would provide a means of egress—and escape route—to a parallel world free of disease, famine, and suffering. But previous attempts to open portals, Dr. Mutnaj said, had the opposite effect—manifesting entry points to worlds filled with nightmash creatures or producing artificial singularities that could potentially annihilate life on Earth.

 

“It’s all about power. They felt by increasing the collider’s power they’d have a better chance of attenuating the opening to a desirable location. It backfired. They claim they’re doing this to save humanity but they are interested only in saving themselves and the elite. Even if they achieved their goal, average everyday people would not be welcome in whatever inhabitable world they discover. This setback gives us more time to find a way to counter their devious plans. I’m happy the explosion happened.”

 

Asked why the mammoth explosion did not generate an earthquake detectable on the Richter scale, Dr. Mutnaj said collider is encased in an underground bunker with fifteen-foot thick concrete walls on all sides. This safety measure ensures radiation remains contained in the enclosure and that mishaps cannot be detected by the outside world.

 

In closing, Dr. Mutnaj encourages citizens to petition French and Swiss governments to terminate the European Organization for Nuclear Research’s lease. Besides creating Portals, CERN has also engaged in other fiendish programs, such as tapping into dark matter and creating the God particle, any one of which could snuff out life in the blink of an eye

 

http:// www.someonesbones.com/blog/cern-suffers-massive-explosion/

Anonymous ID: dadd93 March 8, 2018, 8:09 a.m. No.588545   🗄️.is đź”—kun

https:// ep-dep.web.cern.ch/organisation/alice

 

The ALICE experiment has been designed to study the properties of strongly interacting matter at the extreme values of density and temperature attained in Heavy-Ion collisions at the LHC.

 

At the scales explored so far, quarks are confined by the strong interaction inside protons and neutrons, the building blocks of the atomic nuclei which together constitute the known, visible part of the Universe.

 

At a temperature around 2000 billion degrees (about one hundred thousand times the temperature in the core of the Sun), these structures melt into a plasma of elementary particles which has been dubbed the Quark-Gluon Plasma (gluons being the carriers of strong interaction, that holds the nuclei together). According to the Big Bang cosmological model, such temperatures correspond to the state of the early Universe during the first few millionths of a second: the Quark Gluon Plasma thus represents the primordial state from which evolved all matter in our present Universe. Similar conditions are created, albeit for a fleeting instant, in collisions of heavy-ions at the unprecedented energies offered by the LHC. This opens the unique opportunity to create and study in the laboratory tiny droplets of this primordial matter. About 1500 scientists from over 150 institutions from all over the world have joined forces to build and operate the ALICE experiment. The results obtained so far are among the most important scientific achievements of the LHC, and they are just the start of a journey to discover of the properties of this extraordinary state of matter.

 

 

Group/section Leader

CERN Team Leader P. Vande Vyvre

EP-AID Detectors & Systems L. Musa

EP-AID-DA Data Acquisition V. Chibante Barroso

EP-AID-DC Detector Control System A. Augustinus

EP-AID-DT Detector Technology A. Di Mauro

EP-AIO Management & Engineering Support P. Vande Vyvre

EP-AIP Physics & Computing A. Morsch

EP-AIP-GTP Grid Technology & Production L. Betev

EP-AIP-PAP Physics Analysis & Performance A. Morsch

EP-AIP-SDS Software Development P. Hristov

Anonymous ID: dadd93 March 8, 2018, 8:14 a.m. No.588575   🗄️.is đź”—kun

http:// aliceinfo.cern.ch/Public/Welcome.html

 

ALICE is the acronym for A Large Ion Collider Experiment, one of the largest experiments in the world devoted to research in the physics of matter at an infinitely small scale. Hosted at CERN, the European Laboratory for Nuclear Research, this project involves an international collaboration of more than 1500 physicists, engineers and technicians, including around 350 graduate students, from 154 physics institutes in 37 countries across the world. The ALICE Experiment is going in search of answers to fundamental questions, using the extraordinary tools provided by the LHC:

 

What happens to matter when it is heated to 100,000 times the temperature at the centre of the Sun ?

 

Why do protons and neutrons weigh 100 times more than the quarks they are made of ?

 

Can the quarks inside the protons and neutrons be freed ?

 

This website aims both at introducing non-initiates to the field of physics covered by ALICE and at providing regular information on the evolution of the experiment, with detailed reports of its results and analysis. It also offers an insight into the scientific community gathered around this project and highlights its contributions to the advancement of our understanding of the universe. So, no matter what your involvement with physics, you are invited to tumble down the rabbit hole into the wonderland of ALICE. The Alice Cavern, 2008

 

Photo of the Alice Detector in early 2008.

 

Aerial view of the ALICE site in Saint-Genis-Pouilly, (France, Ain), 2kms from CERN and the Swiss border.

 

Aerial view of the ALICE site in the territory of Sergy, (France, Ain), 2 km from CERN and the Swiss border (access from St-Genis-Pouilly, Point 2 LHC).

 

 

Credits

 

Copyright CERN 2008 - ALICE Collaboration