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LHC: Will We Find The God Particle, Dark Matter and Supersymmetry? [Image: High Energy Collision at 7 Trillion electron Volts]

Could we be on the verge of a revolution of the type we saw in physics a century ago? The world's largest experiment into the fundamental forces of nature has begun in silent pursuit of the answers to some of the most esoteric questions of science, hitherto addressed by spirituality and philosophy. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland, has successfully carried out record-breaking high-energy particle collisions after scientists successfully operated the streams running in the 17-mile (27km) round particle accelerator. With these record-shattering collision energies, the LHC experiments are propelling the world's scientific community into a vast new region to explore, and the hunt has begun for the Higgs boson -- also known as the God particle -- dark matter, new forces and extra dimensions. The LHC seems to have the key to the answers for a lot of inexplicable aspects of science that just don’t add up!

“It’s a great day to be a particle physicist,” said the director-general, Rolf Heuer, of the European Organisation for Nuclear Research or CERN, where the LHC is based. “A lot of people have waited a long time for this moment, but their patience and dedication is starting to pay dividends.” Fabiola Gianotti, leader of the Atlas project, said after the collisions, “It’s so intense, everyone’s feeling a big emotion, a big enthusiasm. It’s a machine of unprecedented size and complexity, but behind that are the people, and particularly the young scientists.” The LHC aims to explore the nature of the universe just moments after the Big Bang and will increase our understanding of how it was created, and what it is made of and how it will evolve. The entire project has so far cost around seven billion euros (USD 9.4 billion).

The atomic particles have smashed together in head-on collisions at 7 Trillion electron volts, three and a half times the previous record. By creating ultra-high energy collisions, scientists are mimicking the conditions just after the Big Bang. The two proton beams began circulating ten days ago in opposite directions around the 17-mile (27km) circular tunnel 100 metres beneath the Swiss-French border at Geneva. The LHC is the largest, most complex scientific instrument in the world and accelerates two counter-rotating beams of protons to within a whisker of the speed of light. The beams are crossed at four points around the underground tunnel, bringing the protons into head-on collisions inside giant detectors. The collisions create tiny fireballs that mimic conditions that prevailed in the universe during the first fractions of a second after the big bang, some 13.7 billion years ago.

“We are going where nobody has been before. We have opened a new territory for physics,” said Oliver Buchmueller, a senior CERN scientist. Scientists watching the event live from around the world described it as an “historic moment” marking the first step towards addressing some of the deepest mysteries in physics. Questions the LHC hopes to answer include the Higgs Boson or the God Particle, Dark Matter and Supersymmetry.

Higgs Boson or God Particle

Scientists hope that the LHC will eventually find evidence for the existence of the Higgs boson, a particle that theoretically explains the origin of mass but which has never been detected. Scientists believe Higgs bosons froze out as the energy levels fell. The particle was postulated in 1964 by Peter Higgs, a British physicist, and several other researchers. If the Higgs particle exists, it would suggest that there is an invisible field permeating all of space that gives mass to fundamental particles, such as the quarks and electrons found in atoms. The Higgs boson's interaction with other particles gave birth to matter in a universe that could have been filled with energy alone.

Dark Matter

The existence of an “exotic” type of matter that cannot be seen but whose gravitational effects can be felt, was first hypothesised in 1934 to account for evidence of “missing mass” in galaxies. Dark matter is the mysterious, invisible substance that hugs galaxies. Dark matter is believed to make up about a quarter of all observable mass-energy in the Universe, but only the most fleeting hints of it have ever been detected experimentally. It is so named because it neither shines nor reflects radiation.

Supersymmetry

In the next couple of years the LHC experiments could lead to the discovery of a new law of physics called supersymmetry, which would explain the dark matter that seems to dominate our universe, and even consolidate the discovery of the elusive Higgs boson particle. Supersymmetry suggests that every particle in the Universe has a symmetric, heavier twin. Attractive features of Trillion-electron-Volt energy scale supersymmetry are the fact that it allows for the high-energy unification of the weak interactions, the strong interactions and electromagnetism, and the fact that it provides a candidate for Dark Matter and a natural mechanism for the breaking of electroweak symmetry.

Conclusion

Once upon a time, the universe and everything in it were just a picosecond old. That instant occurred one trillionth of a second after the Big Bang, or about 13.7 billion years ago. At that time, the universe was not only very young, it was also extremely small, invisible to what billions of years later would become the human eye! Eventually, the universe transformed itself into the still-expanding cosmos that we recognise now, a vast, swirling extension of time and space, including galaxies, gravity, energy and matter. The LHC experiments have begun advancing the envelope of our collective knowledge a critical step closer to recreate the conditions of the universe as they existed in that trillionth of a second. Countless mysteries continue to surround the long cosmic journey from that first picosecond, but some of those riddles -- the nature of mass, the secret of dark matter, the puzzle of black holes and the possibility we live in a realm of 10 or more dimensions as opposed to three spatial and one temporal -- may soon be revealed thanks to the LHC. Imagine the consequences of that for our collective humanity and the ever onwards march of our global civilisation!

[ENDS]

We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. To reflect further on this, please respond within Twitter, Linked and Facebook's ATCA Open and related Socratic dialogue platform of HQR.

All the best


DK Matai

Chairman and Founder: mi2g.net, ATCA, The Philanthropia, HQR, @G140

To connect directly with:

. DK Matai: http://twitter.com/DKMatai

. Open HQR: http://twitter.com/OpenHQR

. ATCA Open: http://twitter.com/ATCAOpen

. @G140: http://twitter.com/G140

. mi2g: http://twitter.com/intunit

- ATCA, The Philanthropia, mi2g, HQR, @G140 --

This is an "ATCA Open, Philanthropia and HQR Socratic Dialogue."

The "ATCA Open" network on LinkedIn and Facebook is for professionals interested in ATCA's original global aims, working with ATCA step-by-step across the world, or developing tools supporting ATCA's objectives to build a better world.

The original ATCA -- Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance -- is a philanthropic expert initiative founded in 2001 to resolve complex global challenges through collective Socratic dialogue and joint executive action to build a wisdom based global economy. Adhering to the doctrine of non-violence, ATCA addresses asymmetric threats and social opportunities arising from climate chaos and the environment; radical poverty and microfinance; geo-politics and energy; organised crime & extremism; advanced technologies -- bio, info, nano, robo & AI; demographic skews and resource shortages; pandemics; financial systems and systemic risk; as well as transhumanism and ethics. Present membership of the original ATCA network is by invitation only and has over 5,000 distinguished members from over 120 countries: including 1,000 Parliamentarians; 1,500 Chairmen and CEOs of corporations; 1,000 Heads of NGOs; 750 Directors at Academic Centres of Excellence; 500 Inventors and Original thinkers; as well as 250 Editors-in-Chief of major media.

The Philanthropia, founded in 2005, brings together over 1,000 leading individual and private philanthropists, family offices, foundations, private banks, non-governmental organisations and specialist advisors to address complex global challenges such as countering climate chaos, reducing radical poverty and developing global leadership for the younger generation through the appliance of science and technology, leveraging acumen and finance, as well as encouraging collaboration with a strong commitment to ethics. Philanthropia emphasises multi-faith spiritual values: introspection, healthy living and ecology. Philanthropia Targets: Countering climate chaos and carbon neutrality; Eliminating radical poverty -- through micro-credit schemes, empowerment of women and more responsible capitalism; Leadership for the Younger Generation; and Corporate and social responsibility.
— with Arnar Valur Jónsonur, Alex Johnson and Danny Rykaczeweski.
  • Laura Worthington, Hayley Irusen, Maria Gonzalez and 16 others like this.
    • Arno Du Pisanie They are eventually going to find out that its pure conciousness/potential underneath all of this :)
      March 31, 2010 at 7:44am
    • Linda Iribarren limitless potential~
      March 31, 2010 at 8:10am
    • Jess Maria Look into a mirror ; )
      March 31, 2010 at 9:28am
    • Jess Maria Can we PROVE Love? : P
      March 31, 2010 at 9:28am
    • Almut Behnke
      this really is a very irresponsible experperiment!
      If all is connectected then this has an unpreditable effect on matter just like a masscollision on a freeway in another dimension.may be that is why european weather totally freaked the sam...e day ! ipersonally have a weird feeeling of torn apart pieces in my heart not good, not at all stable.
      reminds me of an old antlantean experiment, that is not wise, and no success at all to my understanding of oneness!very hard to stabilize again. I wish people would stop playing with forces they do not understand!fire in the hands of children!
      See More
      March 31, 2010 at 11:21am
    • Yvette Mattern I agree with you Almut. seems so unpredictable, so much force, anything could happen, good hopefully but if destructive - there is no turning back.
      March 31, 2010 at 1:26pm
    • Geoff Harrington The collisions are conducted 100 m below ground .
      March 31, 2010 at 1:29pm
    • Almut Behnke geoff,ever heard about quantum pysics trying to explain that time and spae is relative?it does not matter where and when it is an impact! artificially created for no important reason. and i can feel the repercussions in my body, the weahter apparently too.!it is not over yet.. a process was started and i hope, we can balance it!
      March 31, 2010 at 1:59pm
    • Almut Behnke ‎100 m below ground is equal to an explosion just underneath your skine, deep tissue, an explosion is an explosion! this was in earth's deep tissue, a living organism!!!
      March 31, 2010 at 2:01pm
    • Rosa Valado Almut...I suddently feel the violence of that.
      The Big Bang must have been very violent too. I wonder where we are trying to get to???
      March 31, 2010 at 4:04pm
    • Almut Behnke
      rosa, it is ignorance.. it is some kind of madness, blocking away the wisdom we should have by now, especially as the collective mind has records about the distruction of planets and continents through playing around with unknown forces...
      ...it feels a little bit similar to people who lose track of everything while the are in a war.
      these scientists are blocking out their own very knowledge of oneness, time and space, relativity, for a crazy idea of "wanting to know" about the "God particle" .. and if they found it, they still could not use it, because the oneness is always protecting itself...and if there is any destructive energy around, these ignorant stupid people are giving way to it ( excuse my emotions, i am really angry in the name of mother earth as we all should know better by now!)
      the solution i found for myself is taking the energy out of it!
      praying for this not ever happening again!
      some precaution has been taken, but still, those experiments are highly dangerous to our "known" world..
      in love and stay confident ; ) ps- a few month ago i had the answer, that the big bang is the origin of us believing we are not one with the divine, the root of all fear, dispair, and whatever comes out of it..something falling apart, leaving lonely pieces.....taking a log process of recollection.again and again love is the answer...we know all of this these days, where so much is developed and taught and obvious... ; ) may wisdom rule this world from now on!
      See More
      March 31, 2010 at 4:36pm
    • Mari Geiger-Howiler I posted the breakthrough yesterday-then feedbacks on destruction, bad news etc. I personally believe it is exciting!
      http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/science/03/30/large.hadron.collider/index.html?hpt=T1
      March 31, 2010 at 4:36pm
    • Almut Behnke exciting to risk a highly developed picture and an evolving planet just before new birth disappearing in a black hole??or being torn apart?
      March 31, 2010 at 4:38pm
    • Hari Kumar
      I think it's all a lot of hype. The scientists are trying to justify the billions spent on this toy by making all these premature announcements. If you notice all the reports have "could"--"LHC could uncover the secrets of the Universe", "L...HC could find the God particle", "LHC could do this, could do that"... Let's wait till it actually finds something. I am amused at the reports that the LHC has simulated the Big Bang and that it is the first time in the universe such conditions are being recreated. I am no scientist but common sense tells me there are far more intense locations all over the universe such as deep within massive stars and black holes. I find it hard to believe that the complex dynamics of such conditions can be simulated using a couple of magnets and proton beams.See More
      March 31, 2010 at 6:06pm
    • Geoff Harrington
      Submitted on google 8 minutes ago .

      " The LHC is colossal. It is a gigantic doughnut, 17 miles in circumference, in which two beams of protons will eventually create energies of 14 trillion electron volts. Yet by nature's standards the LHC... is a pea shooter. For billions of years the earth has been bathed in cosmic rays much more powerful than those created by the LHC. "

      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304252704575155710695957900.html?mod=rss_Today%27s_Most_Popular
      See More
      March 31, 2010 at 6:54pm
    • Richard Gerber Perhaps there are revelations that have come http://GodParticle.net/ and the LHC will validate them. I can see multiple arguments for and against it's existence. But it is there and part of the story line.
      March 31, 2010 at 7:26pm
    • Richard Gerber There is the black hole thing http://newswire.pro/mini_black_hole_extinguisher.htm and the video which reveals many things http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFYlbsTlCk0
      March 31, 2010 at 7:31pm
    • Richard Gerber Perhaps there is even a book still to be released when they near the data set that will validate the premise
      March 31, 2010 at 7:32pm
    • Geoff Harrington Any tool in the wrong hands is dangerous .
      March 31, 2010 at 7:38pm
    • Rebecca Tozer
      Trying to find a "fundamental" particle seems like an infinite exercise - literally no end to it. There's always going to be something smaller. Instead of focusing on a fundamental particle, how about finding the fundamental pattern? Jus...t a quick perusal of geometry should set us on the right track. The work of Nassim Haramein could be instructive here - http://www.theresonanceproject.org/ (There's a video teaser to watch there, too). The Big Bang, seems to me, was just an instant in time when our Universe set to expanding, tho certainly it's been expanding and contracting ad infinitum, like breathing. To try to find an ultimate truth in the realm of Time may be entertaining, but honestly, won't the true Sources of matter and energy be found outside the realm of Time and Space? And how do we get there, pray tell? Now we're back to the old practices - meditation, shamanic journeying, nondual realization, etc - that can actually transport us into the Void, beyond the confines of physical reality.See More
      March 31, 2010 at 9:39pm
    • Allen E. Simpson
      Yes, the inherent 'logic' of the Universe existing in the 'Big Bang' way in which it claimed to exist doesn't resonate well with me. It sounds more like the beginning of the Bible.

      We, as intelligent and complex of supermonkeys as we like... to think we be, still cannot conceive the size of the Universe (even though I went to sleep every night as a child trying to), and I'm not sure we're supposed to. Or at least not yet in this 'animal-grade' stage of evolution where the world and the programming running it are so tragically monkey-like.

      I'm not sure one can measure otherwise incomprehensible distance across space accurately using light waves anymore than we can prove it isn't just all one big 'energy wave Second Life-type matrix of multiple mutual perspective' and we aren't just measuring elements of the 'program'.

      But at any rate, more information and more knowledge = better, because I believe 'Science' (or at least the scientific method) is merely our way of understand 'God' which I consider to be whatever force is responsible for life, the world in which we exist and can comprehend, and everything above, beyond, and in the future that we cannot yet.

      Fun times on planet Earth.

      BTW - Cool stuff Richard.
      See More
      April 1, 2010 at 5:37pm
    • Almut Behnke
      well it all is a very "head" yexperiment.
      Intuition basically run over by mathematics... that is my reflection to it, and that makes it unwise and dangerous.
      we have found, that patterns repeat no watter in what micro- or macro world we cre...ate them.
      and to create a pattern with that impact without heart and intuition to me is pretty dangerous.
      similar to creating atomic whatevers and not knowing what to do with the waste!
      if more wisdom was applied, answers would be given an easier way and without risk or unwanted distruction.
      See More
      April 1, 2010 at 6:51pm
    • James Birthrong They did not know if detonating the first Atomic bomb would set the sky on fire, yet they did it anyway. Same case scenario here me thinks. Awfully arrogant and foolish if you ask me. Yet, I know nature bats last and even if the noosphere as we know it is destroyed, my spirit will carry on. Up, up, and away!
      April 2, 2010 at 11:20am
    • Almut Behnke yeah james that is the only consolation ; )
      April 2, 2010 at 11:37am
    • Almut Behnke
      ‎...or we simply repeat atlantis??
      everybody knows by now, that homeopathy works... this is only an analogy that you cannot always estimate what is happening on the finer levels, but something is ALWAYS happening
      only some more advances en...tities have to clean up the mess after people who do only use their minds instead of their hearts before they do play with forces they do not understand... scientific kindergarden to me!!!
      that is exactly how atlantis drowned.. scientist playing with frequendies, to get even more power!... aaaaah some people live and learn and some people just live!!
      See More
      April 3, 2010 at 2:01pm
    • Almut Behnke ps and if you find the god particle, dark matter and supersymmetry- what on earth are you going to do with it ? or what is it going to do with you?
      April 3, 2010 at 2:06pm
    • Karen Pappageorge As I understand, the experiment is hoped to show the "creative force" in primordial action. Or, when nothing exists, what comes of it.
      Since the question is being asked while already in an established field, even if it is 100meters below ground, I wonder if this experiment will be true :) I wanna know anyway, we came this far and this is not done from an "evil" so to speak rather a wanting to witness divinity :)
      April 3, 2010 at 3:47pm
    • Bozo Mc Cloud Right on! Let's hear it for the "mysterious, invisible substance that hugs galaxies!"
      April 4, 2010 at 11:48am
    • Debbie Borgono interesting article i thought: http://www.scribd.com/doc/3819110/RMM15-Abstract-1000-wordss
      April 7, 2010 at 6:23am
    • Richard Horowitz This is a great article and I hope these this next phase will come up with more glue for the chord discovered at the origen of the big bang ( Scientific American Feb 2004 THE COSMIC SYMPHONY) to viberate thru...
      April 9, 2010 at 6:21am
    • Donna Phillips Interesting comment by Geoff Harrington regarding cosmic particles passing through the earth being far more powerful than the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland
      April 18, 2010 at 3:25am