Page 195 - Elana Freeland - Under an Ionized Sky
P. 195

CHAPTER NINE



               The Temple of CERN








               The first gulp from the glass of natural sciences will turn you into an atheist, but at the bottom of
               the glass God is waiting for you.
                                                                                       — Werner Heisenberg


               The  Higgs  potential  has  the  worrisome  feature  that  it  might  become  mega-stable  at  energies
               above  100bn  giga-electron-volts  (GeV).  This  could  mean  that  the  universe  could  undergo
               catastrophic vacuum decay, with a bubble of the true vacuum expanding at the speed of light.
                                                                      — Stephen Hawking, preface to Starmus








               CERN  is  an  acronym  for  Conseil  Européen  pour  la  Recherche  Nucléaire,  the  European
               Organization for Nuclear Research. The site housing the massive particle accelerator known as
                                                1
               the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)  was built (1998–2008) near Lake Geneva (Lac Léman). Two
               1,000-ton  superconducting  magnets  hang  suspended  down  three-hundred-foot  shafts  into  a
               cavern  through  which  an  underground  river  once  ran  until  frozen  with  liquid  nitrogen.  The
               magnets are arranged like boxcars around the five-story, sixteen-mile (twenty-seven-kilometer)
               “ring” circling the cavern. Two detectors are built into the loop, the Compact Muon Solenoid
               (CMS) and A Toroidal LHC ApparatuS (ATLAS). Designed to detect tiny subatomic particles
               like Z bosons, pi mesons, strangelets (quarks bound by gluon), etc., the LHC “ring” is in search
               of “clues to the fabric of the universe”:

                     [Dan Green, project manager:] “We expect to see things which will change the way we view the universe”. . .No one
                     really knows what the machine will give birth to. But the equations suggest that some weird stuff could be just around
                     the corner— maybe “dark matter,” the invisible stuff that seems to hang around galaxies.” 2


                   The phrase “No one really knows what the machine will give birth to” is reminiscent of what
               D-Wave’s Geordie Rose says later in this chapter. Haunting.
                   CERN’s massive superconducting electromagnets enhance and magnify the sustained reach
               of the Space Fence throughout our now-ionized atmosphere all the way to the magnetosphere.
               Certainly, CERN and other particle accelerators have been recalibrated to synchronize with the
               rest of the Space Fence infrastructure. CERN’s two-year shutdown corresponded with HAARP’s
               shutdown, and its restart on April 5, 2015 was just four months before HAARP (“UAF Gakona”)
   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200