Robert Johnson France Switzerland county Geneva county Santa Cruz record testing BLOCK Robert Johnson France Switzerland county Geneva county Santa Cruz

CERN Hadron Collider test today after 3 years sparks July 5 Doomsday conspiracy theory

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CERN, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, which operates the world's largest particle physics laboratory is marking its 10th anniversary by turning on one of their most powerful experiments on Tuesday, July 5.After being shut down for upgrade and maintenance work, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiment is set to begin a new period of data after three years.

When the LHC first launched, many believed that the huge amount of energy from it would cause the world to come to an end. Here's everything you need to know about CERN's Large Hadron Collider and the doomsday conspiracy theory surrounding it.

The Large Hadron Collider is the world's largest and most powerful particle accelerator, built to study particles which are the smallest known building blocks of all things.The 27-km-long machine is buried 100 metres underground on the Swiss-French border and has been the centre of conspiracies about CERN.Many believe that the two high-energy beams fired by the machine will collide to open a "portal" that would suck matter around it and devour the world.When the Large Hadron Collider was first switched on near Geneva, Switzerland on September 10 2008, people began theorising that it would create microscopic black holes that would start sucking surrounding matter faster and faster until it causes the world to end.Robert Johnson, a physicist at the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics and a member of the science team for NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope confirmed that there was never any such danger.Especially since the beams did not even collide on the first day it was switched on.

The collider has not produced any collisions so far. So, while it's true that the LHC might create black holes, these holes.

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