A photo open source European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) decided to use the Large Hadron Collider to to prove or disprove the existence of dark matter.
It is currently estimated that the universe is more than 85 percent consists of dark matter – a mysterious substance, which we cannot see, but which, as scientists suggest on Based on observations of gravitational effects, nevertheless exists.
Stars, planets and people are made up of the matter that we see, to which we can touch, but this matter is only 4 percent of the entire “building material” of the universe. Obviously that a person is not fully aware of the reality in which he lives, and we can only guess what our environment is Being. Maybe everything that surrounds us is just computer simulation (remember the movie “The Matrix”)? Who can vouch for that this is not so, because we cannot fully understand even the physical laws of their own planet?
As you know, the last time the andron collider hit humanity, when scientists using it found the “particle of God.” The famous theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking was one of the first to stated loudly that the Higgs boson (or God’s particle) could at that time lead to a catastrophically fast compression of the universe and its complete destruction. Of course, the scientist’s fears were strong exaggerated, but people are still anxious about experiments carried out using the Large Hadron the collider.
Recall that after the “particle of God” was found, the system shut down for no apparent reason, and only now, after three years, she again (with a vengeance and energy of learned enthusiasts) ready to continue work. Was there an incomprehensible malfunction equipment warning over that if scientists will continue to further experiment with matter, the consequences this can affect not only the life of our planet, but the whole The universe?
No one argues that the question of the existence of dark matter is one of the most important in understanding that our Universe is like it was formed, to which laws it obeys and when it comes end. This is the key to the biggest riddle of our world, but not Will we pay for wanting to learn too much? At least least, this is what the scientists Stephen Hawking warns about.
A photo from open sources
Hadron Collider Time Universe Stephen Hawking