Monday, September 7, 2020

Scientific Imbeciles are at it again - Large Hadron Collider claims it produced matter from light

 Ah the imbeciles who govern science today.  Pathetic dim scurrulous savages.  

There are at least 17 utter falsehoods in this article. I leave the reader to find them. 

Lest I bore the accolates let's just discuss the basics. 

Two lasers intersecting do no create matter from nothing. 

aetherions get compressed into moebius loop type patterns by gravity which is vibration/toroid flow of the aether itself. So the two lasers meeting do not "create" matter out of nothing, they might simply be replicating the creation of matter as a star creates it. So think of matter as a locked zero loss state of energy that reciprocates upon itself. Higher gravities can lock more and more of these until you reach neptunium. So don't think of light as creating matter, or a GUT. The GUT is the aether itself and aetherions.


I don't know if they are quoting Griso or Tricco but both are utter imbeciles when they say - "W and Z bosons carry the "

my brain hurts from your stupidity. Go away, just go away.

""Both photons and W bosons are force carriers, and they both carry the electroweak force," Griso says. "This phenomenon is really happening because nature is quantum mechanical."

My god the pain the pain. it BURNS!  The stupidity too powerful causing brain to ... explode


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The Large Hadron Collider plays with Albert Einstein's famous equation, E = mc2, to transform matter into energy and then back into different forms of matter. But on rare occasions, it can skip the first step and collide pure energy—in the form of electromagnetic waves.

Last year, the ATLAS experiment at the LHC observed two photons, particles of light, ricocheting off one another and producing two new photons. This year, they've taken that research a step further and discovered photons merging and transforming into something even more interesting: W bosons, particles that carry the weak , which governs nuclear decay.

This research doesn't just illustrate the central concept governing processes inside the LHC: that  and matter are two sides of the same coin. It also confirms that at high enough energies, forces that seem separate in our everyday lives—electromagnetism and the weak force—are united.

From massless to massive

If you try to replicate this -colliding experiment at home by crossing the beams of two laser pointers, you won't be able to create new, massive particles. Instead, you'll see the two beams combine to form an even brighter beam of light.

"If you go back and look at Maxwell's equations for classical electromagnetism, you'll see that two colliding waves sum up to a bigger wave," says Simone Pagan Griso, a researcher at the US Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. "We only see these two phenomena recently observed by ATLAS when we put together Maxwell's equations with  and quantum mechanics in the so-called theory of quantum electrodynamics."

"A magnet is one manifestation of electromagnetism, and electricity is another," Tricoli says. "But it's all electromagnetic waves, and we see this unification in our everyday technologies, such as cell phones that communicate through electromagnetic waves."

At extremely high energies, electromagnetism combines with yet another fundamental force: the weak force. The weak force governs nuclear reactions, including the fusion of hydrogen into helium that powers the sun and the decay of radioactive atoms.

Just as photons carry the electromagnetic force, the W and Z bosons carry the . The reason photons can collide and produce W bosons in the LHC is that at the highest energies, those forces combine to make the electroweak force.

"Both photons and W bosons are force carriers, and they both carry the electroweak force," Griso says. "This phenomenon is really happening because nature is quantum mechanical."

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