Cern Large Hadron Collider
The Large Hadron Collider is the world's largest piece of laboratory equipment

Cern slapped with doomsday lawsuit

Earth will disappear into a black hole, says nuclear safety officer

Written by Iain Thomson

Since the Earth is still here, there is no reason to believe that collisions inside the LHC are harmful

Cern statement 

A US District Court in Hawaii has been petitioned to stop the operation of the Cern Large Hadron Collider (LHC) over fears that it might cause the end of the world.

Walter Wagner, a former nuclear safety officer, has filed the suit as he fears that the LHC could create a mini black hole that could swallow the planet.

He also expressed concerns that transmuting matter into so-called strangelets could change all other matter into a similar form.

The claims have been dismissed by physicists at Cern. "Some physicists suggest that microscopic black holes could be produced in the collisions at the LHC," said the organisation in a statement.

"However, these would only be created with the energies of the colliding particles, which is equivalent to the energies of mosquitoes."

Cern insisted that no microscopic black holes produced inside the LHC could generate a strong enough gravitational force to pull in surrounding matter.

"If the LHC can produce microscopic black holes, cosmic rays of much higher energies would already have produced many more," the statement added.

"Since the Earth is still here, there is no reason to believe that collisions inside the LHC are harmful."

This is not the first time that the safety of the LHC has been called into question. Russian scientists suggested last month that time travel may occur when the LHC fires up later this year.

It is unclear why Wagner's lawsuit has been filed in Hawaii, since the LHC is located under the Swiss/French border and has no links with the US.

The LHC forms a 27km circle and is the world's largest piece of laboratory equipment.

Once active it will fire a stream of protons into each other at near light speed. The resulting collisions will generate examples of material found in the first seconds of the universe.

Further reading

Time travel could be possible in months

Wormholes expected in Switzerland when Large Hadron Collider goes live   More...

Cern plans mega data store

Eight petabytes of data annually by 2008   More...

Cern builds 6000-strong computer farm

Large Hadron Collider needs some serious computing grunt   More...

Oracle teams up with Cern for grids

Building the grids of the future to find the origins of the universe   More...

Related articles

Time travel could be possible in months

Wormholes expected in Switzerland when Large Hadron Collider goes live   More...

Scientists find 'life' but not as we know it

Inorganic 'life-like' structures 'reproduce and evolve'   More...

Lack of storage keeps secrets of the universe hidden

Life, the universe and everything unlocked – if we had more storage   More...

Cern plans mega data store

Eight petabytes of data annually by 2008   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

09 May 2008

2.51 MBWiMax muddle, Google tactics and asteroid bunkum More...

08 May 2008

3.26 MBBroadband Anywhere, phone-free transport and Web 3.0 More...

07 May 2008

3.19 MBUK success, a paucity of IT women and robot wars More...

Poll

DATA ENCRYPTION

DATA ENCRYPTION

Should encryption be mandatory for all personal data held by companies and governments?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Ofcom

Ofcom outlines future wireless vision

Wi-Fi healthcare and intelligent car brakes in the pipeline   More...

HP

HP Labs opens doors to academia

Innovation Research Program invites proposals related to current research   More...

Advertisement

Asteroid

Nasa plans manned mission to asteroid

Bruce Willis thankfully not going   More...

MySpace

MySpace offers opt-in data sharing

Deals signed with Photobucket, Twitter, eBay and Yahoo   More...

Advertisement