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It might, or it might not. If it does, the tiny black holes would evaporate immediately. The LHC will certainly not produce anything that destroys Earth. The reason for that is that every day we receive impacts of far greater energy - millions of times greater than those of the LHC! - from outer space. So far, these have not produced black holes or anything else that destroyed Earth.

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Q: Is the large hadron collider can produce tiny black holes as they said?
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Where are some place black holes are located when they are formed?

The Large Hadron Collider in CERN


Can a super collider produce a black whole?

I've never heard of a black "whole," but yes, supercolliders can produce black holes.


Can the Hadron particle collision cause mini black holes?

We don't know, but probably not. Questions like this are the sorts of things that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) were designed to discover. But don't worry; any such mini-black holes would be below the Hawking size limit, and would "evaporate" through Hawking Radiation.


What is the 'black hole' that is being constructed in England?

I think you may be referring to the start up of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN on the Swiss/French border. CERN stands for something like Centre des etudes de recherche nucleaire. This is the world's largest particle accelerator both physically and in terms of energy avilable. There has been some suggestion that when this experiment goes live it may produce very small black holes.


Is Large Hadron Collider experiment successful?

YES! The Test was very successful, but due to a problem with the magnets on Sept. 19 2008 they have shut down the LHC it will be re-tested ( used ) In The summer Of 2009. For the test run, no black holes where detected. Also They want to see if the big bang could really happen.


What are the 2 types of stars that produce supernovae?

Red Giants and black holes


What do people do in physics?

Physics regards the physical aspects of the natural world. It includes topics that deal with forces on different bodies within the universe and phenomena that explain how the universe works. Physicists perform experiments and observations to answer questions related to these topics. Physicists look at very big stuff, such as galaxies, black holes, and giant stars. They also look at very small stuff, such as subatomic particles. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a huge machine that physicists are using to look at small stuff.


What were black holes before they turned into black holes?

stellar black holes were stars (these are large)primordial black holes were pieces of the big bang (these are microscopic)


Why do stellar masses result in black holes?

The only known mechanism to produce a black hole is the gravitational collapse of an object that has at least 2-3 times the mass of our Sun. However, it is considered possible that the enormous densities right after the Big Bang may have resulted in some black holes; for more information, read about "primordial black holes".


Is the universe made of black holes?

No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.


Do black holes live forever?

This answer depends on the size of the black hole. Black holes devour anything that falls onto the event horizon. As a black hole eats any and everything around it, it will grow. These black holes will exist as long as the universe exists. Small black holes do evaporate and disappear. This is because of something known as Hawking Radiation. Hawking Radiation is present in all Black Holes but its effects are inversely proportional to the mass of the black hole. This means that the larger the mass of the black hole the less the effect of the radiation is. A Black hole the mass of the Moon would evaporate almost instantly and the smaller the mass, the faster it will evaporate. You may think that a black hole that is larger but has nothing to consume will eventually evaporate, but you'd be wrong. Black Holes not only absorb stars and other objects, but it also feeds on the heat in space. Space is 2.7 kelvin, this is known as the Cosmic Microwave Background. A Black hole with a Solar mass of the sun will have a Hawking Temperature of about 100 Nanokelvins. This is far less then the 2.7 kelvins that space is. This is why large black holes will live as long as the universe itself, and small black holes such as those that could possibly be made with the Large Hadron Collider will never just stay open and consume the Earth. It is physically impossible due to the Hawking Radiation.Answer #2. #1 is correct however I would like to correct the everlasting black holes bit. No black holes will last as long as the universe. Supermassives have the advantage of accreting from the CMB right now. As the CMB cools they'll get less and less energy. Eventualy it's gonna hit an equilibrium where they're radiating as much mass as they're gaining through the CMB, then the scales will tip and all black holes will start slowly evaporating like their stellar-sized cousins did, ableit vastly slower, unless they continue accreting matter. Problem is, when that happens, the universe will be essentially dead, there will be no more stars to eat. Just vast nothingness full of supermassive black holes slowly dying and drifting masses of carbon (Black dwarf stellar remnants). So basically, no black holes live forever.


Can black holes dies?

Black holes do not die but they can evaporate.