Equinox wrote:MetalAngel wrote:
First, it will help the scientists to find the origin of the mass of the atoms, this origin is the Higg's Boson. It's an important element from the atom.
Imagine a flower. This flower is composed of molecules. Those molecules are made of atoms. Those atoms are made of eletrons turning around protons and neutrons. Neutrons and protons are made of quarks. The heart of those quarks is composed by three elementary elements, among them is the theoretical Higg's Boson.
Second, the collider will help to understand what is the black matter of the universe and what is the origin of the universe (Big Bang).
Third, they want to discover the antimatter.
And finally, they want to create some little black holes in order to discover worms holes (Einstein-Rosen's bridge), which are supposedly separating our universe from other dimensions...
Again:
NeonVomit wrote:
Nothing that would make sense to anyone without a degree in physics
Not really... I think a "car" hovering instead of rolling would make sense to anyone even without a degree in physics. Or an "airplane" transporting people to other continents in just a few minutes. And if you pull it even further a craft to transfer humans to the moon for its future colonization. If you take it to the other, the ecological, side, it can give us other type of fuel with less or without polluting fumes.
After all if you pull it further it may give us a unified theory of physics which in turn could "provide" us with unlimited energy.
Well... and if that's to happen, if it will be allowed to happen, then that would mean that soon more revelations will be made but I wouldn't like to go to that aspect. It would be off topic.
