THE WORLD IS DOOMED
Published Date:
2009-09-26 23:53:51 Publisher:paul sharp
The Earth is Being Destroyed!
And there's nothing you can do about it.
This is the untold story of how the earth is being destroyed right beneath our feet, and there is nothing that can stop it. We're not talking about slow, inexorable environmental degradation that will make life difficult for our grandchildren. We're talking about the entire planet disappearing in a matter of years.
Within a very few years, every man, woman, and child, every magnificent wild animal, every sequoia tree that has stood in silent majesty for millennia, every blade of grass, every sewer rat, every mountain, every valley, every grain of sand, every drop of water in the seas, and every molecule of the air we once breathed will disappear into a tiny black nothing.
Yes, you're a "Dead Man Walking" and you don't even know it. And when the end comes, you won't even know what hit you.
Unless you remember that you read it here.
But you won't have much time to think about it.
How the Large Hadron Collider Secretly Killed You
Remember the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)?
When this colossal experiment was being built, there was widely publicized concern that it was dangerous. Scientists working on the project scoffed at the idea that it might create a tiny Black Hole that would swallow the entire earth.
On September 10, 2008, they switched it on.
On September 19, 2008, it broke. And they switched it off.
And you haven't heard much about it since then, have you?
Here's What Really Happened!
The LHC did indeed create a Black Hole. And it has begun consuming the earth. And there is nothing that can stop it.
Now, the creation of this Black Hole really had nothing to do with the damage to the LHC that caused it to be shut down. It is possible that the scientists working on the LHC are not even aware of the fact that a Black Hole was born.
But it was.
Initially, this Black Hole was so small nobody could have noticed its trail of subatomic destruction. It was small enough to pass through billions and billions of atoms without causing any effect. It fell, pulled by the earth's gravity, right into the earth itself.
There was nothing to stop the fall of the micro-Black Hole. It passed right through the empty space of each atom, never colliding with an atomic nucleus, all the way to the center of the earth. And when it reached the center, it kept on going, due to its inertia, and returned nearly to the surface on the opposite side of the earth.
Scientists would say that the Black Hole would simply have popped out of the earth and hurtled harmlessly into outer space, never affecting the earth or any other planet one little bit.
But they're overlooking one thing. Although the micro-Black Hole would almost certainly miss every atomic nucleus it passed, it would inevitably hit an electron once in a while. And it would absorb these electrons.
This absorption of electrons had two important effects on the Black Hole.
First, since these electrons were of the natural stuff of the earth, they did not have the inertia of the Black Hole exiting the LHC at fantastic speeds. Thus, the addition of these electrons to the inertia of the Black Hole caused the Black Hole to slow down. When it passed through the earth, it did not have enough momentum to pass completely out of the earth again. It fell back down into the earth to pass through again. And again. And again, each time absorbing a few more electrons.
Second, although an electron does not have much mass, it does have some. And each electron absorbed by the Black Hole added to its mass, increasing its ability to absorb still more and more matter. Each time it passed through the earth, the Black Hole absorbed more matter than it had absorbed on its previous pass.
And it is continuing to grow even now!
How the Black Hole is Growing
The Black Hole has barely changed in mass since its initial formation. It has a mass of approximately 22 micrograms, about the weight of a particle of dust or a very fine grain of sand.
Due to a peculiar phenomenon called "Hawking radiation," any Black Hole loses some mass all the time. In the case of the micro-Black Hole now growing inside the earth, it is losing nearly as much mass as it gains each day.
Nearly.
The important point is that it is growing. It is growing very slowly, as the mass it gains each day just barely outweighs the mass it loses to Hawking radiation, but it is growing.
We have calculated that at a certain point, when it reaches a mass of about 25 micrograms, its growth will begin to exceed its losses to Hawking radiation by a significant amount. In a matter of only 5 days after crossing this threshold the Black Hole will begin roughly doubling in size every day.
14 days after crossing the 25 microgram threshold, the Black Hole's mass will be more than one gram, roughly the weight of a paper clip. Just 14 days after that, it will weigh more than a mouse.
Exactly 105 days after crossing that 25 microgram threshold, the Black Hole will have grown to about 1 percent of the mass of the entire earth. When that happens, the earth will collapse into the Black Hole within a single day!
The Collapse of the Earth
All the while the Black Hole is growing, until it reaches 1% of the mass of the earth, it will have no effect on the structural integrity of the earth. It will absorb some of the "stuff" of the earth, but the earth contains so much "stuff" that very, very much of it can be taken away without making any difference.
While the Black Hole is still in the microgram range, it will absorb subatomic particles and atomic nuclei only by its own gravitational force. Its gravitational force is extremely concentrated, but still very small. In effect, it can absorb particles only if it happens to collide with them, or to pass within a subatomic gnat's whisker of them.
But the removal of an atom or two here and there will not affect the earth in the least.
Eventually, the Black Hole will weigh several kilograms, and then thousands of kilograms. At this point, it is leaving sizable voids in the earth. It is boring tunnels through the core of the earth. These tunnels will be only millimeters across, and the surrounding material of the earth will flow in to fill the empty space. However, the Black Hole will still be moving so fast that the material flowing in behind it will not have time to catch up with the Black Hole.
It is at this stage, when material from the liquid outer core of the earth is flowing into the tunnels in the solid inner core, that the Black Hole begins to disrupt the magnetic field of the earth, as described on the Warning Signs page.
When the Black Hole grows to a mass of several billions of kilograms, it will be removing several billions of kilograms of matter from the core of the earth each day. It is at this point that so much material has been removed from the earth that the upward pressure on the earth's mantle will be reduced enough that there will be no more volcanoes, as also described on the Warning Signs page.
At this point, the earth has actually begun to collapse, but it will take several more weeks until the final collapse.
When the Black Hole reaches a mass of 1 percent of the earth's entire mass, roughly 6 million billion billion kilograms, things change.
At this point, the Black Hole has slowed down to a near stop at the center of the earth. Now, all the material it absorbs leaves a void – a vacuum within the earth – which the surrounding material rushes in to fill. This material then comes under the gravitational pull of the Black Hole, and is immediately absorbed, so that more material will fall into the void, and so on.
This is a runaway collapse where the gravity of the earth itself is pushing more and more matter into the gravitational field of the Black Hole.
Within a matter of hours, the entire earth will have fallen into the Black Hole.
That includes YOU!
The Earth Will Disappear on December 21, 2012
We have calculated that the Black Hole will cross the critical 25 microgram threshold on September 7, 2012. The earth will be swallowed up 105 days later, on December 21, 2012.
You've heard that before, or something very like it. Very many sources from very many different cultural traditions attach some apocalyptic significance to the year 2012, and often specifically to the Winter Solstice – December 21 – of that year.
And that is precisely the date we have calculated that the micro-Black Hole created in the Large Hadron Collider on September 19, 2008 will grow to the critical mass needed to swallow the entire planet.
Early in the day, there will be massive earthquakes. The core of the earth will be flowing rapidly into the Black Hole, leaving nothing to support the mantle of the earth. As the mantle begins to fall inward, the crust will crack and fold. The outer parts of the earth will be shrinking as the inner parts disappear into the Black Hole.
The crust and mantle will begin flowing inward at the points where they are weakest. This includes the seafloor spreading zones, such as those in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean and the eastern Pacific Ocean, the continental rift zones, such as the one in East Africa, and the mantle hot-spots, such as the ones under the Hawaiian Islands and the Yellowstone Basin. Land near these places may be the first places to disappear.
Also, the waters of the oceans will flow into the voids. If you live near the sea, you just may live long enough to see the ocean disappear, and the dry land stretch from your nearby beach out to the distant horizon.
But very soon after that, all the land will fall into the nothingness at the center of the earth.
Probably nobody will fall through the Black Hole's event horizon alive. Everyone will be killed in the collapse of the buildings and the buckling of the land around them many minutes or even hours before their dead bodies are sucked into the Black Hole.
Warning Signs
There will be very few warning signs of the growing monster within the earth. Until very late in 2012, there will be no signs at all. The dust-sized Black Hole will fall endlessly around the earth's center of mass, effectively in orbit within the outer core of the earth itself. And it will have no noticeable effect on the earth or anything else.
Some time during October, 2012, the Black Hole will begin to make its presence known, but only in the most obscure ways.
As its mass grows, it will begin disrupting the complex interaction between the liquid outer core and the solid inner core of the earth, an interaction which creates the earth's magnetic field. Navigators and scientists who study the earth's magnetic field will begin to report signs of a sudden and total collapse of the field some time in late October, 2012.
People will be concerned about that. The loss of our magnetic shield will leave the earth exposed to the full force of solar and galactic "winds" of radiation. This could have long-term effects on life and on human health.
That is, if there were going to be a long term. In fact, it won't matter. So when you read about it in the news, don't worry about it!
Another odd effect that nobody will attribute to the Black Hole is that in November and December of 2012, there will be no volcanic eruptions anywhere on earth. This is because the Black Hole, absorbing more and more material from the core of the earth, will relieve the upward pressure within the mantle that drives volcanoes. This phenomenon will probably not attract any attention at all. It will just be seen as part of the normal variation in volcanic activity – sometimes we have volcanoes, and sometimes we don't.
But you will know, if you remember to check the news, that the lack of volcanic eruptions is your final warning.
What Can You Do About It?
Nothing.
Nothing can prevent this destruction, and there is no way to escape it. Even those few human beings who may be on the International Space Station or on other manned space missions at the time will only have the end prolonged for them. Yes, they will survive the immediate destruction of the earth, but they will then have no place to go. They will be in orbit around a Black Hole. The astronauts will have no home to return to, no way to survive where they are, and no way to find a new home. They will eventually starve, and the human race will be finally extinct in a matter of weeks after our home planet is gone.
There is nothing anyone can do to prevent the Black Hole from swallowing the earth. Even if the scientific community were to be convinced that the Black Hole exists - or forced to admit it - there would be nothing to stop it. There is nothing to make it go away.
There is no point even in investigating the matter and assigning blame. We will all share the same fate. Come December 21, 2012, time is up!
There is only this that remains for you to do in the few years you have left. Consider what kind of life you would like to have led – what kind of life you believe you ought to have led. Compare that to the kind of life you have actually led so far. Make any adjustments you must make now. There will be no time to make things right tomorrow.
What Will the Solar System Look Like Afterward?
It is of purely academic interest, but here it is anyway.
Perhaps some day, visitors from another world will explore our solar system and find something odd. They'll find Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. They'll find comets and asteroids and icy Kuiper belt objects in the far reaches of our solar system. But nothing like a habitable world.
In between the orbits of Venus and Mars, they'll find something that may be new to their science: A small Black Hole more massive than Venus – as massive as a typical habitable planet – in a nearly perfectly circular orbit, just like a planet. It will have a small planet orbiting around it – the one we once called the Moon.
They might find the remains of civilization in space near this tiny Black Hole. Communications satellites will orbit around it. Imaging satellites of a sort that could monitor weather will peer down upon the great Nothing.
Yes, satellites and the Moon will continue orbiting the Black Hole "forever." Despite what you may have read about the inexorable destruction wrought by Black Holes, they can only absorb things that actually fall into them. The gravitational field of this Black Hole will be no stronger than that of the earth today. It's just that its mass will be so concentrated – into a volume less than that of a house – that its gravitational field at its event horizon will be destructively powerful. Out at the distance where satellites orbit, some 8,000 to 23,000 miles away from the Black Hole, the satellites will orbit just as they do now. In fact, today's low-earth-orbit satellites, including the International Space Station, which are normally affected by atmospheric drag and need a boost now and then, will be able to orbit the Black Hole "forever," since there will be no more atmosphere to drag them down.
Perhaps the visitors who find this bizarre remnant of our civilization will be wise enough to figure out what happened to us. Perhaps they will be wise enough to prevent it happening to themselves.
from earthbeingdestroyed.com