Are we all going to die next wednesday?

Intel_Nehalem

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  • Jun 7, 2008
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    Pannipitiya
    Our lifes are in the hands of scientist that created this gargantuan machine - the largest, most expensive scientific experiment in history, the 'Large Hadron Collider', to be turned on next Wednesday.
    Although it was designed to answer the fundamental questions of life, some people have claimed that it could end up destroying the entire cosmos.
    This gigantic £4 billion-plus atom-smasher has been built under the Swiss-French border near Geneva, and is the most powerful device ever built for probing the secrets of the atom and the forces and particles which make up our Universe.
    It is a staggering device, occupying a train-sized tunnel 18 miles long, buried 300ft underground, studded with gigantic, cathedral-sized ring-shaped detectors where collisions between packets of 'heavy' subatomic particles, 'hadrons', will take place in the hope that the innermost workings of matter and energy will be revealed.
    The LHC is, arguably, the most impressive machine ever built by Mankind.
    But a few people are convinced that it should never be turned on. A lawsuit has been lodged at the European Court For Human Rights by a small group of maverick scientists.
    They claim there is a small - but not zero - chance that when the LHC is activated it will create either a mini-black hole which would fall into the ground and swallow the Earth from within (scenario one).
    Or, even more bizarrely, trigger a catastrophic chain reaction in the very fabric of space and time itself, which would rip apart the entire universe like the skin of a bursting balloon (scenario two).
    Two nightmare scenarios, two ends of the world. In the first, there is little warning. For maybe a month there would be no sign that life was about to come to an abrupt and nasty end for all living things on Earth.
    Then, earthquakes would start unexpectedly, alerting geologists that something terrible, unimaginable, was amiss.
    After a few days, these seismic disturbances would reach catastrophic proportions.
    Cities would be levelled, the oceans would rise and wash in a series of mega-tsunamis that would attack the world's coasts, killing millions.
    The fact that the earthquakes were striking randomly, not along well-known geological faultlines, would be proof that something devastating was afoot.
    Finally, the end would come, in a disaster of Biblical scale. The Earth would literally start to crack up.
    Molten lava would wash over the land and the seas would start to boil.
    Mega-hurricanes would level buildings and forests the world over. Eventually, mountains would crumble as the Earth's crust continued to disintegrate.
    The fabric of the planet itself would start to disappear, trillions of tonnes of rock, water, air and life sucked into a whirlpool of unimaginable force.
    From space, our blue-and-white home would appear to vanish down a plughole in a flash of light.
    At least in this scenario we would have a little time, perhaps, to come to terms with the end.
    However, a second doomsday scenario is even more terrifying. There would be no warning at all.
    In an instant - about one-twentieth of a second - the entire Earth would simply vanish from space.
    Less than two seconds later, the Moon would follow suit. Eight minutes later, the Sun would be ripped apart, followed by the rest of the planets in the solar system and onwards, a wave of destruction caused by a rent in the fabric of space itself, spreading out from our world at the speed of light.
    Any extra-terrestrials out there would die too, in due course. And there would be nothing technology could do about it.

    read more here
    Is it a hoax? I hope that it is!!!!!!!!!!!!:( :( :(
     

    fly_boy

    Member
    Aug 17, 2008
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    Fly to the Sky
    macho uba kiyanne meka genada???????????

    matanam melodeyak therenneneee

    but there some news on web

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