Imagine If a Black Hole Opened at CERN
This is CERN, the Nuclear Research laboratory on the
border of France and Switzerland. It features the most powerful particle
accelerator on Earth. It accelerates and collides particles99.99% the speed of light.
And maybe, it could produce the very first lab-grown Ah, black holes.
Gravitational matter-devouring monsters traveling across the Universe on their
own terms. Some of them are so big, they could gobble up the Sun in a day.
Could scientists create one of those at CERN? Theoretically,
yes. But could a lab-made black hole be the end of Earth? Let’s see. The LHC is
a 27 km (16.7 mi) ring of superconducting magnets. Inside, it accelerates particles
to move at almost the speed of light. These particles are bound to collide. And
when they do, they produce enough energy to create new particles.
We’re talking about very small amounts of energy here.
The numbers are so tiny that scientists came up with a new unit of energy to
measure particle energies at that scale. It’s called the tera electron volt
(TeV).Fourteen TeV give you new particles. One followed by 19 zeros of TeV would
give you a black hole. Already picturing doomsday scenarios? That’s very much
in the spirit of What If. But that's not how it would go down. If one of the
experiments at the LHCended with scientists creating a black hole, that black
hole would be microscopic, as in quantum-level small. It would have a mass
about40 million times smaller than the E. coli bacterium. It wouldn't get out
of the accelerator and rampage across the planet, chewing up everything in its way.
Well, it could get out, but because of its laughably
small gravitational pull, it wouldn't attract a single piece of matter. The
black hole would lose its energy, through what's known as Hawking radiation,
long before it could gain any substantial mass. As if it never existed in the
first place. Even when folks at CERN build a next-generation lab, the Future
Circular Collider, that will out power the Large Hadron Collider, we'll still
be pretty safe.
For a lab-produced black hole to potentially cause
any damage, it would need to have a mass of at least 0.00002 g (0.0000007 oz).That's
about 50 times smaller than the mass of an ant. It would take that black hole
nine octillion years to reach the size of 1 kg (2.2 lbs).And another decillion years
to swallow up the Earth.
The whole process would take longer than the age of
the Universe. I’d say no need to worry about it at all. The Earth doesn't get destroyed
every time physicists do something cool.
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