What are the chances that a particle collider’s strangelets will destroy the Earth?

February 13, 2014PHYSICSEven before RHIC began operating in 2000, some people worried that the unprecedented experiment would pose risks of potentially catastrophic scenarios. Some of the concerns included the creation of a black hole or production of strange matter that could result in the destruction of the Earth, possibly within seconds. In 1999, before the collider opened, the media attention on the subject prompted BNL to form a committee of scientists to investigate the probability of such catastrophic scenarios. A few months later, the committee concluded that RHIC was safe. RHIC has now been running for nearly 15 years, and scientists have used it to make many fascinating discoveries, such as that of a quark-gluon plasma with a temperature of 4 trillion K. This liquid-like substance is unlike any kind of normal matter and recreates the conditions that existed during the first seconds of the universe. But due to budget cuts, in 2013 a government advisory panel recommended shutting down RHIC in the coming years as funding is put toward other projects. The US Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2014, passed just a few weeks ago, includes a provision for the establishment of a nine-member commission to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of all of the US national labs, including RHIC. It’s called the Commission to Review the Effectiveness of the National Energy Laboratories. According to Eric E. Johnson, Associate Professor of Law at the University of North Dakota, and Michael Baram, Professor Emeritus at Boston University Law School, this may also be a good time to reevaluate the safety risks at RHIC. They have written an opinion piece on the subject that is posted at International Business Times. Johnson and Baram are calling for the new commission to look into the risks of RHIC destroying the Earth in addition to evaluating the financial aspects. A large part of the motivation for their appeal is because of the ongoing upgrades to RHIC. The collider is preparing for its 14th run, where it will be operating at 18 times the luminosity for which it was originally designed. The high luminosity will enable scientists to conduct more detailed studies of the quark-gluon plasma’s properties and investigate how it transitions into the normal matter that we see in the universe today.
Another area that Johnson and Baram argue begs some scrutiny is that RHIC is now running at lower energies than in the past. Somewhat counter-intuitively, lower energies may pose a higher risk than higher energies. In the original risk assessment report in 1999, the scientists stated that “Elementary theoretical considerations suggest that the most dangerous type of collision is that at considerably lower energy than RHIC.” That assessment referenced RHIC’s original design energy of 100 GeV. Over the years, lower-energy experiments were performed, and the 2014 run will include three weeks at 7.3 GeV. Johnson and Baram are concerned that these changes might increase the possibility that the collider will generate strangelets, hypothetical particles consisting of up, down, and strange quarks. Some hypotheses suggest that strangelet production could ignite a chain reaction converting everything into strange matter. In their opinion piece, Johnson and Baram quote Sir Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal of the United Kingdom, who stated that the Earth would then become “an inert hyper-dense sphere about one hundred meters across.” Along with other critics concerned with safety, Johnson and Baram are concerned that the original risk assessment in 1999 was biased because all of the committee members were either planning to participate in RHIC experiments or had a deep interest in the RHIC’s data. The diversity of the new commission may allow it to overcome that problem. Since the new commission will reflect a broad range of expertise in science, engineering, management, and finance, Johnson and Baram think that “this gathering of talent is a unique opportunity to ensure the RHIC gets the rigorous, independent risk analysis it has long warranted. The luminosity upgrade, along with other evolutions of the RHIC program—including running collisions at different energies—suggests that the question of risk needs a fresh look,” Johnson told Phys.org. “For example, one of the reassurances given in the original safety report in 1999 was that the RHIC would run at a relatively high energy that would make strangelet formation less likely. But now the RHIC is being run at much lower energies. So, a re-evaluation is in order. Bottom line, I can’t say whether or not the RHIC program is so risky that it should be shut down. But I do think it’s clear that the original safety assessment lacked independence and that it is now woefully outdated.” –Physics
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11 Responses to What are the chances that a particle collider’s strangelets will destroy the Earth?

  1. niebo says:

    “. . . Look into the risks of RHIC destroying the Earth in addition to evaluating the financial aspects.” And, hey, while you’re at it, order us a pizza..

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  2. bobby90247 says:

    “…What are the chances that a particle collider’s strangelets will destroy the Earth?…”
    Simple! NONE!

    Does anyone seriously “think”…that “our” scientists have enough knowledge to do something of that nature? HELL NO!

    They “may” be on the brink of something new, but, to destroy the entire Earth? No way!

    Destroy their “technologic wonder”…YES! Maybe even the surrounding building and a little more, but…that’s it!

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  3. Mole Johnson says:

    I dont want to be converted into strange matter.

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  4. Red Bill says:

    I don’t want to worry you, but it has already happened.

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  5. Nate says:

    One’s really got to love the Hypothetical end of it! It brought about many decent B grade Movies on the subject. Great material for Hollywood and some other small film companies.

    From what i have read on the subject, is that at the lower energies there would be a possibility for damage to some of the superconductive Magnets and some other components from excess heat and flux, as for creating black holes and other strange matter, I find it quite sensational 😛 But Sensational today sells Huge!
    I’m more concerned about these ancient Reactors scattered around the world than any particle physics facilities.

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  6. Nikola Milovic says:

    This great game with particle colliders is fun that it allows the creation of many types of non-existing particles in nature and thus can only multiply ” zoo stillbirth .” If scientists want to know how it came manifested ( visible and measurable ) part of the universe (think of matter and energy ) should be , first, to find out what it is that spiritual entity of the universe from which everything was created and disappear . The entire mass of a large galaxy to be converted in the energy of electro-magnetic waves of enormous frequency and temperature , and to establish conditions for the creation of a ” God ” particle , for which science rushes to find her . The second condition is that this is not achieved at the moment, but it takes eons of years .
    It would be more useful to spend the money for finding ways of getting energy from space ( perpetuum mobile) , which certainly exists, because everything in nature occurs by law perpetuum mobile, but we do not know . But it must be known that the spiritual component of man is stronger than the material . In a few tens of billions of euros every European would have to have the “flying backpack ” that can move at altitudes up to several hundred meters above the ground and at speeds in all directions up to a few hundred meters per second . Some think what is better . Do not be afraid of kolliders, except that the time to increase the material misery of people .

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  7. nanoduck says:

    It could open up temporal rifts that allows other unsavory entities to come here. Thats one way how some demons got here. The scientists have no clue how manipulating matter here can also affect other dimensions. Jesus spoke of how things done on earth is also done in heaven.

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  8. Andre says:

    Remember that this is not CERN, but the lower energy level RHIC (Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Lab.

    “The creation at RHIC of an unstable liquid drop of strangelet was always denied, prior to the experiment. It was only anticipated in 2000 by a Safety Officer of Accelerators, who denounced that possibility and put a suit, risking his job, to RHIC, Mr. Walter Wagner, a Physicist from Livermore Laboratory. He lost his job for that suit . . . And yet, it created a proto-strangelet liquid with a behavior similar to that of a black hole. This was a ‘BIG surprise’ for all scientists involved who claimed before at RHIC that they would never produce a single strangelet (strange liquid particle) but just an evaporating, harmless gas. And yet they did make the first particles of strangelet liquid, fortunately enough in small numbers and without any explanation on how it had happened.” http://cerntruth.wordpress.com/2011/12/27/119-terrorists-will-start-production-of-strangelets-irony-or-destiny/

    A very complex subject for the non-physicist, but I think we can see scientists who create particles they previously said would not be created as a threat to our existence. What happens when the far more powerful CERN is next tested at higher energy levels, using heavy lead ions?

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    • Mole Johnson says:

      heavy strangeness.

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    • bobby90247 says:

      “Seriously…!!!” HAD, they created anything, and I mean “ANYTHING,” with the properties of a, so-called, “BLACK HOLE” (which is ridiculous to begin with), “WE” (the entire human race) has NOTHING which could contain it…PERIOD!!!

      Even a “microscopic” singular atomic weight of it would be uncontrollable by anything we have.

      So, whatever it was “they” created, it was NOTHING of the nature of a Black Hole!

      However, I DO “love” the “terms” they assign to “stuff” THEY don’t understand! You know, like “strangelet”…my, my, my! Oh yeah, and “Quarks” and their “flavors?” “WOW!” One day, when they all discover that all they are looking at is the same particle, just from a different POV, everyone will be amazed that they didn’t realize it sooner!

      “…nuff said!”

      late!

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