- #36
vanesch
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ubavontuba said:Their plan isn't to make just one or two, but rather thousands at a time.
The "plan" is not to make any black holes at all. Idle theorists have been looking for all kinds of weird speculations (because it's their job, and they don't have much experimental data on their hands for which there's no explanation yet) in the vague hope that they might be on something. Give them 30 more years and they'll come up with potential strawberry production in 42 dimensions
The only thing that the LHC will do is to smack protons together at about 10 times more energy than what has been done at the Tevatron at Fermilab for about 10 years or so.
In the most probable scenario, the only thing that will happen is Higgs production. In the next most probable scenario, supersymmetric particles might be found (and even this is totally speculative). All the rest is a wild guess.
Another issue; what's in it for us? Other than a "looky what we did", what value is this science to humanity?
It's a further test of some fundamental theories. Apart from the tremendeous technological spinoff resulting from the applied research by the experimentalists to make the machine and detectors up and running, there's not more utilitarian return than, say, a telescope or an astrophysics department or a visit to the moon. Nevertheless, don't underestimate the technological return by the experimentalists. It's big.
It seems to me that any effect that might be created at these energies is wholly impracticable for utilitarian applications. Or, if there might be a way to use these effects at lower energy levels, why not just build the lower energy technology and see if it works?
Lots of valuable resources expended, little likelyhood of benefit, possibility of doomsday destruction. Yeah... that sounds like a good plan!
Well MOST of the expended resources do not go to the PhD students looking at the data on their PC, but go into the applied R&D to build machine and detector. And *that* research has a lot of practical returns.
Let's for example not forget (as a VERY SMALL investment of some computer scientists thinking about a practical way to organize information dissemination within a collaboration) that it was at CERN that the WWW was invented (not "internet" as some erroneously claim). Talk about some return on investment !