Finding God

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woodchip
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Finding God

Post by woodchip »

In 2007 the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will become operational. The main function of the LHC is to find the Higgs Boson. The Higgs is nicknamed the God particle because of its importance to the Standard Model, the theory devised to explain how sub-atomic particles interact with each other. So my question is, once discovered, how will knowledge about the Higgs affect our daily lives and/or manufacture of new devices that make our lives better?
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Avder
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Post by Avder »

What do I look like, a particle physicist?

How the hell should any of us know?
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Post by Flabby Chick »

I swear i just finished reading the last page of Angels and Demons by Dan Brown all to do with that very subject. Cue spooky music.........
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Post by Duper »

it will help us understand quantum physics a bit better and other stuff.

oh.. I guess that's a bit vague. :D

um.. it makes really cool sqirlly lines! WOOT!
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CDN_Merlin
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Post by CDN_Merlin »

I think it would allow us to produce nano technology easier since we would know ho to manipulate sub-atomic particles.
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dissent
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Post by dissent »

Maybe the Higgs won't be discovered, at least not in the way, shape or form expected.
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Tricord
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Post by Tricord »

The discovery of the Higgs particle would only satisfy our scientific curiosity. Like you said, the building of the particle accelerator is almost only for confirmation or denial of the standard model. That alone makes it important enough to build it.
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Mobius
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Post by Mobius »

it's highly unlikely the LHC will find a Higgs Boson. It isn't capable of producing enough electron volts to cover the spectrum where it might appear. Although it does theoretically overlap the bottom of its range. It is possible they'll get lucky though.

Asking what application something has even before it's discovered is fairly naiive in my view.
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Robo
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Post by Robo »

Whoever you are, don't even bother posting one of those pictures. I'm sick of those, ruins the topics.
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roid
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Post by roid »

i have never heard of this before, but it sounds important for the furtherment of nanotechnology and quantum computing. both of which are sexy.
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Post by Duper »

roid wrote:i have never heard of this before, but it sounds important for the furtherment of nanotechnology and quantum computing. both of which are sexy.
Sooooo.. you like women that can time shift and are too small too see? Dude.. thats a shopping nightmare.. :P
Dedman
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Re: Finding God

Post by Dedman »

woodchip wrote:how will knowledge about the Higgs affect our daily lives...
It won't.
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WarAdvocat
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Post by WarAdvocat »

Not today it won't maybe...


But tomorrow, when you jump in your inertialess antigravity sled to get to work, you may thank your lucky stars for the Higgs!
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Post by Dedman »

WarAdvocat wrote:Not today it won't maybe...


But tomorrow, when you jump in your inertialess antigravity sled to get to work, you may thank your lucky stars for the Higgs!
Probably not. With the way my career is going I won't be able to afford an antigravity sled.
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Top Gun
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Post by Top Gun »

WarAdvocat wrote:Not today it won't maybe...


But tomorrow, when you jump in your inertialess antigravity sled to get to work, you may thank your lucky stars for the Higgs!
Yup, and we all know that the year 2000 brought great innovations in the nuclear-powered flying car department. :P
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WarAdvocat
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Post by WarAdvocat »

I blame the clueless Luddite Green masses.
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roid
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Post by roid »

Dedman wrote:With the way my career is going I won't be able to afford an antigravity sled.
but when you hit rockbottom you figure you can just STEAL one.

think positive :D
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Post by contact »

if the multiverse is indeed infintely large, then why should it not also be infinitely small?

we may very well find that things keep on getting smaller and smaller, and there is no final indivisbile state.
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