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The generally accepted model of The Big Bang is that photons in an early, hot and dense state of the Universe collided and expanded into the known Universe today. Scientists at CERN have been trying to recreate these conditions with the Large Hadron Collider ever since it has been created, and they have come 'relatively' close.
My question is, however, how are they not creating supermassive, or just massive black holes? When massless or elementary particles collide they rip fabrics in spacetime and create black holes; which are still pretty much nature's most elusive mystery and we know little about. I did a quick Google search and the only thing that I can conclude is that it is due to something called '
Scientists at CERN have run numerous successful experiments, but you also may be asking yourself, "What do they expect to happen if they collide 2 elementary particles and recreate the Big Bang?" Well, for starters, physicists theorize that the particles involved in the original Big Bang were traveling at 'faster than light' speeds, and not to mention, the Universe was in a completely different state than what it is now. The conditions were more nursing for what happened with the Big Bang than here on Earth or in any CERN laboratory.
My question is, however, how are they not creating supermassive, or just massive black holes? When massless or elementary particles collide they rip fabrics in spacetime and create black holes; which are still pretty much nature's most elusive mystery and we know little about. I did a quick Google search and the only thing that I can conclude is that it is due to something called '
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' which is basically black holes do not solely suck matter in; but they also spew it out, which causes the black hole to shrink until it disappears into 'nothing'Scientists at CERN have run numerous successful experiments, but you also may be asking yourself, "What do they expect to happen if they collide 2 elementary particles and recreate the Big Bang?" Well, for starters, physicists theorize that the particles involved in the original Big Bang were traveling at 'faster than light' speeds, and not to mention, the Universe was in a completely different state than what it is now. The conditions were more nursing for what happened with the Big Bang than here on Earth or in any CERN laboratory.
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