|
|
... the researchers are looking for - Higgs boson or God's particle - is what destroys the experiments. According to physicist Holger Bech, the Higgs particle travels back in time and destroys itself looking like it does not want to be discovered. ... light on the origin of the mass in univers and of course reveal information on the Big Bang.
Video Holger Bech explanation on CERN collider malfunction
|
|
... the future intervenes and stops the discovery of the God particle: After observing several strings of bad luck, such as cancellations or breakdowns, that have haunted other supercolliders, physicists Holger Bech Nielson of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and Masao Ninomiya of the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, have proposed that the sought-after product of the collider is so ...
|
|
... through time to stop the collider before it could make one, like a time traveller trying to halt his own birth. “All Higgs machines shall have bad luck,” said Dr Holger Bech Neilson of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen. Thus the cable meltdown that afflicted the LHC was an inevitable effect of the laws of time, a notion that leaves most Cern scientists scratching their heads in ...
|
|
... "God Particle". This particle is the elemental building block of all creation.
It is this search that may be the cause of all of the Hadron Colliders problems. Two scientists, Dr Holger Bech Nielsen and Dr Masao Ninomiya have written a paper entitled: "Test of Effect in Large Hadron Collider: A Proposal". In this article, the authors state that either nature or God hate ...
|
|
... through time to stop the collider before it could make one, like a time traveller trying to halt his own birth.
"All Higgs machines shall have bad luck," said Dr Holger Bech Neilson of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen. Thus the cable meltdown that afflicted the LHC was an inevitable effect of the laws of time, a notion that leaves most Cern scientists scratching their heads in ...
|
|
... been for naught and the original breakdown was destined to occur.
After observing several strings of bad luck, such as cancellations or breakdowns, that have haunted other supercolliders, physicists Holger Bech Nielson of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and Masao Ninomiya of the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, have proposed that the sought-after product of the collider is so ...
|
|
Related Tags
|