MINIATURE BLACK HOLES COULD PROVE PARALLEL UNIVERSES
The miniature black holes could probe parallel universes, as several
scientists have stated:
“CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is being fired up this week after a
two-year hiatus and a group of scientists think the results could prove the
existence of parallel universes.
A paper published by Dr.s Ahmed Farag Ali, Mir Faizal, and Mohammed M.
Khalil in the journal Physics Letters B argues that the
second run of the LHC produces or detects miniature black holes, which they
argue could point to entire universes hidden away in higher dimensions folded
into our reality.
“Normally, when people think of the multiverse, they think of the
many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, where every possibility is
actualized," Faizal explained to Phys.org. "This is not what
we mean by parallel universes. What we mean is real universes in extra
dimensions."
It all comes down to some pretty theoretical science known as gravity's
rainbow. The basic idea is that gravity doesn't bend light equally, but instead
affects each wavelength proportionally. To summarize the paper, this means that
earlier attempts to find miniature black holes in the LHC weren't using enough
power because the scales had shifted around these objects.
Now LHC will be powered to its highest-ever energy levels – about double
those of its last run – and if these scientists are right the new run could
uncover black holes tucked away in dimensions beyond the four we interact with
in our daily lives.
“As gravity can flow out of our universe into the extra dimensions, such a
model can be tested by the detection of mini black holes at the LHC.” he
continued. “We have calculated the energy at which we expect to detect these
mini black holes in gravity's rainbow [a new theory]. If we do detect mini
black holes at this energy, then we will know that both gravity's rainbow and
extra dimensions are correct."
It's exciting stuff, especially considering that the gravity's rainbow
postulate denies the big bang theory, arguing instead that the universe has no
point of origin. The new experiments at CERN could also shed light on dark
matter and antimatter, or even push physics beyond the standard model.
The LHC first made
headlines when naysayers suggested it could spark a world-eating black hole,
but more recently ignited a firestorm in the science community by proving the
existence of the Higgs boson 'god particle'.”
(IGN.com, 2015)
PAVARE
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario