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Just as it says...
#171467
I don't mind if it swallows the solar sytem as long as it's quick and painless.
#171468
I don't mind if it swallows the solar sytem as long as it's quick and painless.


Falling into a black hole will not be quick (for the falling object, does it not take forever?) and I don't know how painless being spaghettified is.
#171470
It won't happen.

Plus the machine will probably break down yet again.
#171471
I was reading something that one of the men in charge of the HLC is trying to sabotage itself from the future because of the blackholes it creates are sending ripples through time
#171472
We're definitely not going to get sucked into a black hole, that's just media hyperbole. There's a possibility that it won't work again though, how hard can it be to smack two sub atomic particles together at close t the speed of light? :scratchchin:
#171473
We're definitely not going to get sucked into a black hole, that's just media hyperbole. There's a possibility that it won't work again though, how hard can it be to smack two sub atomic particles together at close t the speed of light? :scratchchin:

Don't say that otherwise it might give the Top Gear production team ideas to make Clarkson and co build their own with a £1500 budget "OF THEIR OWN MONEY". :hehe::hehe:
#171475
I was reading something that one of the men in charge of the HLC is trying to sabotage itself from the future because of the blackholes it creates are sending ripples through time


What? the machine takes over sometime in the future and sends some feathery ****** back in time to drop a baguette into itself in the past!

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/ ... -goes-phut

The TERNinator.
Last edited by stonemonkey on 21 Nov 09, 15:54, edited 2 times in total.
#171476
We're definitely not going to get sucked into a black hole, that's just media hyperbole. There's a possibility that it won't work again though, how hard can it be to smack two sub atomic particles together at close t the speed of light? :scratchchin:

Don't say that otherwise it might give the Top Gear production team ideas to make Clarkson and co build their own with a £1500 budget "OF THEIR OWN MONEY". :hehe::hehe:


:hehe:

That I'd pay to see!

"Jeremy Clarkson and fellow Top Gear presenters James May and Richard Hammond receive the 2010 Nobel Prize for their discovery of the elusive Higgs Boson, the particle responsible for giving mass to all known matter. The Higgs Boson, dubbed 'The God Particle', is the missing link in the standard model of particle physics and it's discovery has been highly anticipated since Peter Higgs theorised it's existence almost 50 years ago. When asked about this extraordinary achievement Clarkson responded with, 'It was a piece of cake, I don't know what these namby pamby scientists were making a fuss over'"


If ony. That would have gone down well in my 2nd year presentation :hehe:
#171477
We're definitely not going to get sucked into a black hole, that's just media hyperbole. There's a possibility that it won't work again though, how hard can it be to smack two sub atomic particles together at close t the speed of light? :scratchchin:

Don't say that otherwise it might give the Top Gear production team ideas to make Clarkson and co build their own with a £1500 budget "OF THEIR OWN MONEY". :hehe::hehe:


:hehe:

That I'd pay to see!

"Jeremy Clarkson and fellow Top Gear presenters James May and Richard Hammond receive the 2010 Nobel Prize for their discovery of the elusive Higgs Boson, the particle responsible for giving mass to all known matter. The Higgs Boson, dubbed 'The God Particle', is the missing link in the standard model of particle physics and it's discovery has been highly anticipated since Peter Higgs theorised it's existence almost 50 years ago. When asked about this extraordinary achievement Clarkson responded with, 'It was a piece of cake, I don't know what these namby pamby scientists were making a fuss over'"


If ony. That would have gone down well in my 2nd year presentation :hehe:

:rofl::rofl:

Knowing Clarkson he would "discover" it with the use of a hammer. :P
#171478
I was reading something that one of the men in charge of the HLC is trying to sabotage itself from the future because of the blackholes it creates are sending ripples through time


What? the machine takes over sometime in the future and sends some feathery ****** back in time to drop a baguette into itself in the past!

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/ ... -goes-phut

The TERNinator.


would it of come back with feathers or not?
#171482
We're definitely not going to get sucked into a black hole, that's just media hyperbole. There's a possibility that it won't work again though, how hard can it be to smack two sub atomic particles together at close t the speed of light? :scratchchin:

Don't say that otherwise it might give the Top Gear production team ideas to make Clarkson and co build their own with a £1500 budget "OF THEIR OWN MONEY". :hehe::hehe:


:hehe:

That I'd pay to see!

"Jeremy Clarkson and fellow Top Gear presenters James May and Richard Hammond receive the 2010 Nobel Prize for their discovery of the elusive Higgs Boson, the particle responsible for giving mass to all known matter. The Higgs Boson, dubbed 'The God Particle', is the missing link in the standard model of particle physics and it's discovery has been highly anticipated since Peter Higgs theorised it's existence almost 50 years ago. When asked about this extraordinary achievement Clarkson responded with, 'It was a piece of cake, I don't know what these namby pamby scientists were making a fuss over'"


If ony. That would have gone down well in my 2nd year presentation :hehe:

:rofl::rofl:

Knowing Clarkson he would "discover" it with the use of a hammer. :P



LOL for sure

"Right i'll get my hammer"

:hehe:
#171484
I was reading something that one of the men in charge of the HLC is trying to sabotage itself from the future because of the blackholes it creates are sending ripples through time


What? the machine takes over sometime in the future and sends some feathery ****** back in time to drop a baguette into itself in the past!

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/ ... -goes-phut

The TERNinator.


would it of come back with feathers or not?


Did the T-900 have hair and fingernails?
#171486
I don't mind if it swallows the solar sytem as long as it's quick and painless.


Falling into a black hole will not be quick (for the falling object, does it not take forever?) and I don't know how painless being spaghettified is.

Yes but my hope is that it will also alter the speed of time making it seem like an instant. It might be over before we have time to process it, and by then we won't exist to remember it.
Another possibility is that whatever happens to the matter, we being part of that matter won't even detect that we are being shrunk and altered etc and will just continue on our merry way. Maybe that happens to us regularly.

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