originally posted in:Secular Sevens
[url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21499765]Linky[/url]
[quote]A concept known as vacuum instability could result, billions of years from now, in a new universe opening up in the present one and replacing it. It all depends on some precise numbers related to the Higgs that researchers are currently trying to pin down.
A "Higgs-like" particle was first seen at the Large Hadron Collider last year. Since detecting the particle in their accelerator experiments, researchers at the Geneva lab and at related institutions around the world have begun to theorise on the Higgs' implications for physics.
One idea that it throws up is the possibility of a cyclical universe, in which every so often all of space is renewed.
"What happens is you get just a quantum fluctuation that makes a tiny bubble of the vacuum the Universe really wants to be in. And because it's a lower-energy state, this bubble will then expand, basically at the speed of light, and sweep everything before it," the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory theoretician told BBC News.
It was not something we need worry about, he said. The Sun and the Earth will be long gone by this time.[/quote]
Thoughts?
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Edited by Wolfy 9r9r: 2/22/2013 7:35:45 PMI don't know if they said this in the article, but whether or not this is actually a Higgs Boson particle is still unconfirmed. Still, this is one of the most under-rated news stories of 2013(so far). If this is actually the Higgs Boson, then this is one of the more monumental scientific discoveries of the decade. If the Higgs field were proved, things would get intense. :D
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[quote]It was not something we need worry about, he said.[/quote]Oh, whew. That had me scared for a seco-- [quote]The Sun and the Earth will be long gone by this time.[/quote]WHAT DO YOU MEAN THE SUN AND EARTH WILL BE GONE?
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I just want a cyclical universe plz.
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It was interesting to say the least when i read this earlier, but i thought this was already the conclusion for the universe or reality anyway, that in several billion years there will be nothing.
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When it comes to space, the worst part about being alive now is that the technology to be able to travel the solar system is being made, but none of us will actually leave this planet.
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Beat you to it.
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It's not like we have enough dangers in space already.
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Interesting, but considering that a long time from now, we are doomed to heat death anyway, this doesn't seem like all that bad of news. Either way, if life still exists many billions of years from now, they are going to have to find a way to a better universe. But it is even more likely in the next thousand years our understanding of the universe will advance to the point where both predictions of doom are rendered obsolete.
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[quote]not something we need worry about[/quote] [quote]The Sun and the Earth will be long gone[/quote] For some reason I still feel a bit worried.