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HELL
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Thumbs up Science Read (very cool)

http://www.sciencenews.org/20010310/bob1.asp

Jiggling the Cosmic Ooze
A new blueprint for all the universe's mass and energy may be just around the corner
By Peter Weiss

Only rarely do scientists make a discovery requiring textbooks to be rewritten. Yet physicists say they now may be on the verge of a "Eureka!" of that magnitude.

Within just a few years, clear signs of a never-before-seen subatomic particle known as the Higgs boson are expected to show up in the world's most powerful accelerators, where the energy of particle collisions can form new particles. Although physicists have found many other exotic fundamental particles since the 1930s—some so important that their discovery earned Nobel prizes—finding this particle would be different.

"All the discoveries in the last century, in a sense, were finding more of things like those already found—until this. The Higgs is a completely new kind of object never known to exist before," says Gordon L. Kane of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Indeed, if it weren't for the Higgs boson, all matter would be on the left side of Albert Einstein's famous formula, E = mc2. Without the Higgs, nothing—not molecules, this magazine, you, Earth, the sun, or anything else—would exist as matter. Everything would always be in the form of energy dashing along at the speed of light.

The Higgs plays such a crucial role in shaping the universe as we know it that it was dubbed the God particle by Leon M. Lederman, who won the 1988 Nobel Prize in Physics for codiscovering the muon. Lederman is now at the Illinois Math and Science Academy in Aurora.

To find this legendary particle, researchers must bash together a billion trillion of more familiar subatomic particles, such as protons, at energies higher than those ever achieved before in any laboratory. Only then, theoretically, will a Higgs boson occasionally pop out of a dramatic fireball. The price tag for the undertaking, not to mention the technical challenge, is enormous. A single accelerator being built for this work will cost $4 billion.

The scientific stakes are also colossal. Prestige, fame, and, probably, a Nobel prize are in store for those researchers who find the Higgs first. Consequently, the top high-energy physics laboratories of the United States and Europe are pitted against each other in a race to the goal.

At Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Ill., physicists restarted on March 1 a rebuilt collider (SN: 6/19/99, p. 399), the Tevatron, with the search for the Higgs as its top priority. "We'd do anything possible to be able to find the Higgs," says Fermilab Director Michael S. Witherell. "Everyone agrees it's the discovery our field needs to move to its next level of understanding."

As Tevatron research gets underway, heavy equipment will be busy near Geneva, Switzerland, constructing an entirely new accelerator, called the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN).

If the Tevatron hasn't nailed the Higgs by some time between 2006 and 2008, the then-completed LHC may grab the prize from under Fermilab's nose. An international team of researchers has designed the LHC to generate collisions seven times as energetic as the Tevatron's collisions and to create a more plentiful stream of particles to analyze. At Fermilab, "everyone here is nervous and excited . . . . Either we find the Higgs before the LHC is finished, or forget it," says Joseph Lykken, a Fermilab theorist.

Despite all the sound and fury, physicists concede that this race may ultimately have no winner. Although well-examined and widely accepted theory declares that the Higgs is out there, it may not actually exist.

The standard model of physics describes with remarkable precision all the known particles of the universe and the interactions that occur between them (SN: 7/1/95, p. 10; 7/29/00, p. 68). Only gravity has yet to be integrated into the model. The standard model identifies a dozen fundamental fermions, or matter particles, which come in two families known as quarks and leptons. The model also specifies five force-carrying particles, collectively known as bosons.

For all its successes, however, the theory omits a rather pivotal trait of particles—their mass. "The major question in particle physics is why any elemental particle would have any mass at all. The most natural theory would have all the particles with no mass, just like the photon," says Melvin J. Shochet of the University of Chicago and Fermilab. But there's plenty of mass in the universe, making such a theory obviously wrong.

To patch these flaws in the standard model, theorists proposed the existence of some sort of influence that permeates all of space, weighing down particles passing through it. This cosmic molasses is called the Higgs field.

A sufficient jolt, like an extremely powerful particle collision, can set the molasses quivering. Such a vibration amounts to a particlelike manifestation of the field—a Higgs boson. Theorists predict that there's also a second, even thicker molasses that only affects quarks—the constituents of protons and neutrons—and gives them much more of their mass than the Higgs field does. But the Higgs is the only source of mass shared by all particles that have mass.

The Higgs boson, however, is not a form of matter. And, although it's called a boson, it doesn't carry force, as do the other bosons. For example, photons and gluons provide the forces that hold atoms together.

Unlike other standard-model particles, the Higgs boson interacts with another particle in proportion to the particle's rest mass—its mass when standing still. Yet at least part of that mass only exists because of the interaction between the particle and the Higgs boson.

Finally, of all fundamental particles in the theory, the Higgs is the only one devoid of spin, which is a quantum mechanical property analogous to the whirling of a top. Particles with spin have some intrinsic magnetism, but not the Higgs.

If physicists do find the Higgs boson, they'll want to study the particle in detail to help them understand the mass-giving mechanism. But that's not the only tantalizing secret of physics they'll want to pursue.

The Higgs boson has become a doorway to the future of physics. Whatever new, more comprehensive picture of the universe lies ahead depends in large measure on what the mass of the Higgs turns out to be.

The standard model shows us very well how the universe works. The Higgs will be the first discovery that tells us why the universe works the way it does," Kane says. "It narrows the possibilities and points us in certain directions."

Might the universe be filled with yet-unseen particles that are partners to all the ones already known? If the Higgs boson's own mass turns out to be relatively small, it would bolster so-called supersymmetry theories that include such a mirror world of particles (SN: 4/13/96, p. 231). Moreover, if supersymmetry turns out to be the correct model of the universe, that lightweight Higgs would be only the first of five increasingly heavy forms of the particle.

Alternatively, could the standard model—made yet more comprehensive with some still-to-be devised theory of gravity—continue on as the best, most complete description of the particle universe? That would be possible if the Higgs boson's mass is light or middle-weight, theorists predict. If there's no Higgs in that mass range, calculations within the standard model lead to weird predictions, such as certain interactions among particles taking place with probabilities greater than 100 percent.

Other Higgs masses lead to their own far-out consequences. For example, suppose the Higgs boson turns out to be heavier than the standard model predicts and is not just one particle, but a pair. Then, the universe could be the stomping ground for a host of very heavy particles proposed by a set of alternative models of particle physics, including one called Technicolor.

A very heavy Higgs, even beyond what Technicolor would require, may even have implications for the number of dimensions in the universe. However, theories of extra dimensions remain too rudimentary to predict a Higgs mass, says Michael Dine of the University of California, Santa Cruz.

The concepts of the Higgs field and the Higgs boson arose in the 1960s. Physicists then were trying to understand the relationship between the electromagnetic force, which includes the attraction between electrically charged particles, and the weak force, which causes nuclear decay.

They knew that the carrier of the electromagnetic force is the photon, the most familiar massless boson. Theorists then postulated that one or more other bosons mediate the weak force. Because the weak force acts only over short distances, scientists inferred that those bosons had to have lots of mass. But no one could explain what would make them so heavy, while the photon has no heft at all.

In 1964, theorists in Belgium and Scotland concluded independently that there must be a pervasive field in the universe that is responsible for the mass in these weak-force bosons. Further work showed that this field could bestow mass on all fundamental particles that have mass. Researchers have dubbed the mass-giving field the Higgs field, after the Scottish physicist Peter W. Higgs of the University of Edinburgh.

While theorists have had a heyday with Higgs physics ever since, experimentalists have run into brick walls for nearly 30 years. Since no one knows how much the Higgs weighs, experimenters have been colliding particles at greater and greater energies, which, in turn, produce heavier and heavier clouds of particles. The scientists keep hoping that one of those particle will turn out to be a Higgs. The Superconducting Super Collider in Texas was to be dedicated to the Higgs quest, but Congress considered it too expensive to see to completion (SN: 10/30/93, p. 276).

Just last fall, however, experimenters at CERN thought they may have caught the very first signs of the Higgs boson, in debris from particle smashups at the Large Electron Positron (LEP) collider.

After a distinguished 11-year career, LEP was scheduled for dismantling last September to make way for the Large Hadron Collider. In a last-ditch effort to urge the Higgs boson out of the LEP, researchers pushed the machine to its energy limit and won a monthlong extension of life for their accelerator last fall. At that extreme, two of the LEP detectors recorded five collisions harboring tantalizing hints that the coveted Higgs had formed and then instantly disappeared (SN: 12/9/00, p. 381). There were also a dozen other less convincing events. The mass of these fleeting particles—expressed in energy units—was almost 115 billion electron volts (GeV), or about the mass of an antimony atom.

Although the findings electrified the particle-physics community, confirming or disproving them would have required keeping the accelerator open yet another year. That would have delayed construction of the more powerful LHC, while adding millions to its cost. Although the decision rankled and disappointed many LEP scientists, CERN's director-general opted on Nov. 8 to shut down LEP and to push forward with the LHC as quickly as possible.

With that decision, CERN passed the baton to Fermilab, at least until 2006, when the LHC might begin taking data.

Fermilab's Tevatron pushes protons and antiprotons to the highest energies in the research world. Traveling in opposite directions around a 6.5-kilometer ring at nearly the speed of light, the particles collide and annihilate each other at two locations. There, detectors as large as three-story houses track the subatomic debris that spews from the submicroscopic fireballs.

What's more, the newly upgraded Tevatron is expected soon to generate collisions at a rate 20 times as high as it did before. Fermilab plans to make further improvements in about 2 years that would boost the collision rate another sevenfold. To handle the tremendous jump in collisions and the increased amount of debris to be tracked, analyzed, and recorded, experimenters have rebuilt both of the Tevatron's huge detectors.

Although LEP researchers may not have found the Higgs, they did show that the particle, if it exists, can't have a mass smaller than 113 GeV. Within the still unexplored higher masses, physicists estimate that a supersymmetric, light Higgs would fall below 130 GeV and a standard-model Higgs below 170 GeV, and a Technicolor Higgs would weigh no less than 160 GeV.

If the Higgs mass actually is 115 GeV, as the LEP results suggest, the Tevatron will require 2 to 3 years of operation to pile up evidence as convincing as that from the defunct European collider. And it will take 5 years or more to accrue enough data to make a truly convincing case that Fermilab scientists have discovered the particle, according to some researchers.

Others are betting a discovery will be in hand sooner.

Hendrik J. Weerts, a physicist from Michigan State University in East Lansing and a Tevatron researcher, for instance, expects the hot prospect of discovery to speed up the pace of research. The information acquired during LEP's last days is like a newly discovered dinosaur bone, Weerts says. "Once you have a bone, the excitement is much higher than if you're just looking." If the Higgs really exists at 115 GeV, it will be in hand by 2004, he predicts.

Gordon Kane, an architect of supersymmetry theory, is even more optimistic, predicting the announcement of a Higgs discovery within 2 years. He says if signs of a 115-GeV Higgs start to pile up early at the Tevatron, the physics community will quickly consider it a confirmation that the LEP data were actually due to Higgs bosons. Kane also notes that the lightest particles that are supersymmetric partners to known particles may show up at the Tevatron before the Higgs.

If the Higgs is heavier than 115 GeV, however, then the chances for a Tevatron discovery go down. Physicists associated with Fermilab maintain, however, that they can convincingly snag the Higgs even if its mass is up to 130 GeV as long as the Tevatron's collision rate meets expectations.

Adding to the fervor, a new analysis by scientists at Fermilab and the University of California, Davis suggests that the Tevatron may have a better chance than scientists previously believed of discovering the Higgs boson—at any energy. That's because, the Illinois and California researchers say, the collider is capable of creating the Higgs in the company of very massive fundamental particles, called top quarks—a combination that no prior accelerator had the energy to create. Physicists had previously ignored this production mode, however, because it yields only a few Higgs, says Fermilab's Joel Goldstein.

"Our argument is that these events are so spectacular that even if you have only a handful, they should really stick out of your data," Goldstein says. He and his colleagues present their findings in the Feb. 26 Physical Review Letters.

Others outside of Fermilab aren't so optimistic.

"If it's heavier than 115 GeV, my conviction is that the Tevatron is out of the game," says CERN's Patrick Janot, who was physics coordinator for LEP's Higgs search.

It's easier to rule out particular masses for a Higgs boson than it is to establish the particle's reality. Even if the Tevatron's Higgs search does come up empty-handed, Fermilab experimenters will have acquired valuable information. They'll have shown that the particle doesn't exist at masses up to about 190 GeV. It would then be left to CERN and the LHC to find a heavier Higgs.

Then there's that other nagging possibility: that there is no Higgs. That's the premise of a recent science fiction book called White Mars (2000, St. Martin's Press) by veteran sci-fi author Brian W. Aldiss and Oxford University mathematician and theoretical physicist Roger Penrose.

In their tale, the LHC becomes 100 times as powerful as currently expected but finds no trace of the Higgs. Instead, by 2009, hints show up of another mass-bestowing entity called the Omega Smudge. In pursuit of it, researchers build an accelerator circling the moon, but it, too, fails. The book ends in the 22nd century, with scientists out beyond the solar system still looking for the source of mass. By then, they're working on a detector as big around as the rings of Saturn.

Physicists on the front lines of the Higgs search today acknowledge that their coveted particle may not exist. But if it isn't a Higgs that's the basis of mass in the universe, then something else—call it a smudge, if you like—has to be the answer.

"There's no boring way out of this," Witherell insists. If something other than the Higgs is there, he says, then "that even goes beyond our past experience, and it is almost certainly more exciting."


Central oval shows a highly magnified computer reconstruction of the impact point of the June 14, 2000, particle collision documented in the cover image. Off-center particle sprays (left and right ovals) may be breakdown products of a Higgs boson. (ALEPH collaboration/European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN))

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Old Post 03-14-2001 10:06 PM
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Pianomahnn
Sw0ul3!!!!!11

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quote:
Originally posted by HELL:

At Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Ill., physicists restarted on March 1 a rebuilt collider (SN: 6/19/99, p. 399), the Tevatron, with the search for the Higgs as its top priority. "We'd do anything possible to be able to find the Higgs," says Fermilab Director Michael S. Witherell. "Everyone agrees it's the discovery our field needs to move to its next level of understanding."



Heh!

That's my backyard. I love it when my hood get's publicity.

------------------------
Live In Freedom

In retrospect, I probably should have taken the vanilla icecream. But the chocolate looked far too tempting. Little did I know at the time, it was actually little children all mushed up into a fine icey paste. Needless to say, I didn't sleep well that night, and neither did those kiddies. Well, I didn't stand for such a crime!! NO WAY. I marched back in that store and demamded an explanation. And there is was. Double chocolate icecream. Sitting there, waiting to be ingested. Oh, the taste. Oh the pure orgasmic feeling when you consume the delicious cream. Oh, how I love chocolate icecream.

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Old Post 03-14-2001 11:06 PM
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Dog Breath
Cuddly Puppy

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Interesting stuff.
I suppose it could prove out or completely refute relativity. My money is on Einstein.

He had more intuition in his little finger than 99% of todays scientific community. His intelligence was not his strong point it was his intuitive nature.

------------------------
Woof.

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Old Post 03-14-2001 11:40 PM
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GoFuckYourselves!
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Fuck that! Let them find a nice, cheap hotel in Midtown!!!

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Old Post 03-15-2001 01:41 AM
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Fiend
batshit crazy

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good read

damn long tho, that tops paint at is worse/best

------------------------
"An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools."
-Ernest Hemingway

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Old Post 03-15-2001 02:52 AM
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Paint CHiPs
Viva Le Me

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That is very interesting.

Could somebody please explain it to me?

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Old Post 03-15-2001 03:21 AM
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Gravestone
Fluffy Bunny

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quote:
Originally posted by Paint CHiPs:
That is very interesting.

Could somebody please explain it to me?



Ok I'll give this my best shot, and dont take my word as the ultimate truth, this is just the basic understanding that I've come up with from reading a ton of articles on the subject.

Science has come up with a standard model on how stuff in the universe reacts, or simply put, the laws of nature (though gravity is not included in this model) One of the basic tenents of the model is electromagnatism, everything contains a electromagnetic field that can react with other fields at infinite distances. The only thing this does not apply to is the behavior of sub-atomic particles. So scientists had to come up with another explanation. This is the "electroweak" theory.

Ok so in the atom we have all these sub-atomic particles, muon's, photons, leptons etc (each do a particular thing but thats where I get really hazy on my understanding) They have determined that photons have no mass by themselves, so technically they shouldn't exist except only as energy (E=) But scientists have found that reactions between photons and other particles (usually called Z and W particles) do have mass, which should invalidate the theory that photons do not have mass etc etc etc.

To explain this, back in the 60's a physicist by the name of Higgs came up with the hypothesis that there was a non spinning particle (the only particle that dosent spin) that regulates the interaction of other particles in a electroweak field giving them mass and validating the theory of relativity. So what does this mean here, basically what particle physists are trying to do is break the electroweak field between particles by smashing particles in an accelarator together in an accelarator. The premise is that when this happens at high energy that each partice will form individually, the photons, muon's etc and the Higgs Boson.

SO in a nutshell, they are looking for something really really small that gives matter its mass

GS

------------------------
A conclusion is simply the place where you got tired of thinking.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 03:46 AM
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GoFuckYourselves!
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quote:
Originally posted by Gravestone:
Ok I'll give this my best shot, and dont take my word as the ultimate truth, this is just the basic understanding that I've come up with from reading a ton of articles on the subject.

Science has come up with a standard model on how stuff in the universe reacts, or simply put, the laws of nature (though gravity is not included in this model) One of the basic tenents of the model is electromagnatism, everything contains a electromagnetic field that can react with other fields at infinite distances. The only thing this does not apply to is the behavior of sub-atomic particles. So scientists had to come up with another explanation. This is the "electroweak" theory.

Ok so in the atom we have all these sub-atomic particles, muon's, photons, leptons etc (each do a particular thing but thats where I get really hazy on my understanding) They have determined that photons have no mass by themselves, so technically they shouldn't exist except only as energy (E=) But scientists have found that reactions between photons and other particles (usually called Z and W particles) do have mass, which should invalidate the theory that photons do not have mass etc etc etc.

To explain this, back in the 60's a physicist by the name of Higgs came up with the hypothesis that there was a non spinning particle (the only particle that dosent spin) that regulates the interaction of other particles in a electroweak field giving them mass and validating the theory of relativity. So what does this mean here, basically what particle physists are trying to do is break the electroweak field between particles by smashing particles in an accelarator together in an accelarator. The premise is that when this happens at high energy that each partice will form individually, the photons, muon's etc and the Higgs Boson.

SO in a nutshell, they are looking for something really really small that gives matter its mass

GS



I'm so afraid that they'll mess with something the wrong way and the universe will fall apart like one of those buildings that they destroy and you have fun watching tumble.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 03:55 AM
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Paint CHiPs
Viva Le Me

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Ummmm.

I guess I don't get how a particle could "create" mass.

But then again science was never my strong suit.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 03:56 AM
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GoFuckYourselves!
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Post

quote:
Originally posted by Paint CHiPs:
Ummmm.

I guess I don't get how a particle could "create" mass.

But then again science was never my strong suit.


Particles attract other particles. Just like dust.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 03:57 AM
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Gravestone
Fluffy Bunny

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I dont think its really creating mass, its more like lending its own mass to massless particles like the photon, I like physics and love reading about this stuff, but when it comes to all the sub-atomic stuff it really gets murky, part of the problem being that even the greatests minds in the world only "think" this thing is there, since they have not been able to prove its existance. That type of stuff is definatly the foggy end of science.

GFY, I know what you mean, I love some of the quotes from the physicists that worked on the manhattan project, alot of them were betting that the chain reaction would run away and spread destructively around the globe, basically causing the earth to "fission". Makes you sleep well at night knowing that :/

GS

------------------------
A conclusion is simply the place where you got tired of thinking.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 04:02 AM
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slight
long pig

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yup, I'm with GFY. It's so nice to think that finally we are making particles that probably haven't existed naturally since the universe was very young and very, very unstable.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 04:13 AM
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Ezra
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I don't know.... It's good and all, I just don't think the average person should try to figure out such a thing.... Granted, I didn't read it all... It just seems that to get to the point of figuring out something that you can't actualy get to, Will break your nerve in the long run... Agian though, If your a scientist and not a person... People will take it, unless they can prove you other wise. It could be true.... It could not.....

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Old Post 03-15-2001 05:54 AM
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Ezra
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Very interesting, though....

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Old Post 03-15-2001 05:56 AM
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GoFuckYourselves!
#1 Asylum Dumbfuck!

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Remember this: At one time, the earth was flat. OR SO SAID THE MOST BRILLIANT MINDS AT THAT TIME!!!!!

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Old Post 03-15-2001 06:53 AM
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Dog Breath
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I think the relativity model explains mass sufficiently. I think "The Grand Unification" theory is in question here and I will take Einstein's work over any other.

Photons have no APARENT mass. A photon is just a normal particle moving at the speed of light or faster relative to our position. As speed increases the objects aparrent mass decreases. That is relativity. It is a matter of perception. To us the photon apears to be without mass but from the photon's perspective our particles are pure energy too.
To say that the speed of light is the fastest speed makes no sense to me. No matter how fast something is traveling at or above the speed of light it apears to be moving at the speed of light. Velocity is relative. The light from the sun flys at us at the speed of light simple? Consider a star in the other side of the earth. It's light also comes at us at the speed of light but from the opposite direction. The relative speed between the suns photons and the stars photons is twice the speed of light. We are moving at an incredible speed through the universe. Why does the light behind us and the light ahead of us hit us at the same speed? Because velocity is relative, so is energy. As soon as something is moving at the speed of light or higher from our perspective it is pure energy and we can no longer measure it's speed above the speed of light.
Did I lose any one? That wasn't my best explanation but it is a complex subject.

Another interesting phenomenon is that Time is also relative. Time runs faster on the surface of the earth than it does in an airplane moving faster than the earths rotation. That was tested and confirmed at different altitudes. WEIRD! It was done using atomic clocks one on the ground and one or two in the air. The clocks on the planes lost time relative to their speed.

------------------------
Woof.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 04:29 PM
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HELL
euphorbia's bad side

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Question

quote:
Originally posted by Dog Breath:
Another interesting phenomenon is that Time is also relative.


I agree, the affect weightlessness has on the astronauts is very interesting. I wonder what the connection of time and gravity is other than it just putting stress on our bodies? I also wonder how much longer we would live in that environment and how that could affect space travel? I have lots of questions and no eight ball.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 04:41 PM
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Ats
The machine

Registered: Sep 2000
Location: Helsinki. Finland
Posts: 233

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quote:
Originally posted by Dog Breath:
Interesting stuff.
I suppose it could prove out or completely refute relativity. My money is on Einstein.


No no, pretty much everybody already agrees that relativity is correct about the things it predicts, the discovery of Higgs' bosons won't change that.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 07:35 PM
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melon
Fishleader

Registered: Jul 2000
Location: salmon city
Posts: 1409

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i hope someday in the future we could build complex science boats that can travel through time.

you know its good because its science.

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Old Post 03-15-2001 07:45 PM
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HELL
euphorbia's bad side

Registered: Aug 2000
Location:
Posts: 3539

Talking

quote:
Originally posted by melon:

you know its good because its science.



Did melon just take a swipe at me?
or am I just being paranoid...or am I being paranoid about being paranoid...or paranoid about that too?

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Old Post 03-15-2001 08:02 PM
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