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From: Sjouke Burry on 19 Mar 2010 19:14 Sam Wormley wrote: > On 3/19/10 3:43 AM, Magnetic wrote: >> Today night the physicists-criminals from CERN accelerated protons to >> the record energy 3.5 TeV per beam. At the regions of collisions, >> probably, the rays were on skew lines (two lines that do not intersect >> but are not parallel). It is not excluded that there were accidental >> collisions of protons. >> > > > The LHC temps are many orders of magnitude below those > of the very early universe. Even cosmic rays are 6-12 > orders of magnitude greater than the LHC. > About a hundred people have tried to confuse M with facts. It does not work. He is like a maniak blind to all arguments and info.
From: Sam Wormley on 19 Mar 2010 20:12
On 3/19/10 3:43 AM, Magnetic wrote: > Today night the physicists-criminals from CERN accelerated protons to > the record energy 3.5 TeV per beam. At the regions of collisions, > probably, the rays were on skew lines (two lines that do not intersect > but are not parallel). It is not excluded that there were accidental > collisions of protons. > At 5:20 a.m., local time, in Geneva, Switzerland, physicists sent two proton beams racing around the Large Hadron Collider's oval-shaped, 17-mile-long (27-kilometer-long) underground tunnel. Each beam packed a powerful 3.5-trillion-electron-volt (TeV) punch�the highest energy yet achieved in a particle accelerator, or atom smasher. (Learn more about atom smashers.) The Large Hadron Collider had also set the previous record. Last December the LHC smashed two 1.18-TeV beams to create a 2.36-TeV collision. |