Black Hole-Like Phenomenon Created By Collider

edited March 2005 in Science & Tech
A fireball created in a particle accelerator bears a striking resemblance to a black hole - but thankfully not the sort that could consume the Earth.
A FIREBALL created in a particle accelerator bears a striking similarity to a black hole. But don't panic: even if the controversial claim is true, it is not the sort of black hole that would cause Earth to disappear in a puff of radiation.

At the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, New York, beams of gold nuclei travelling at close to the speed of light are smashed into each other. The intense heat of the collision breaks down the nuclei into quarks and gluons, the most basic building blocks of all normal matter. These particles form a ball of plasma about 300 million times hotter than the surface of the sun (New Scientist, 16 October 2004, p 35).

The fireball, which lasts a mere 10<sup>-23</sup> seconds, can be detected because it absorbs jets of particles produced by the collision.
Source: New Scientist

Comments

  • a2jfreaka2jfreak Houston, TX Member
    edited March 2005
    That's 10<sup>-23</sup> seconds.

    The quote lack up a superscript makes it look like anywhere from 10 seconds upto 23 seconds, rather than 10 to the -23 power seconds.
  • CycloniteCyclonite Tampa, Florida Icrontian
    edited March 2005
    Haha. I KNEW that didn't seem right. Ten seconds is a long ass time for something like that.
  • edited March 2005
    I was thinking, "mere 10-23sec? WOW, Thats LONG! How long do they want it for?" but yeah, seems alot more realistic once you clairifed it.
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