Scientists to find out God Particle -Theory already exists in India
MIL/Agencies/Mailtoday, Apr 9, 2008. Author: Nitin Raj/Max Martin
Geneva: April 9, 2008 – IR Summary- Great many scientists from different countries are working deep under the earth, on the mountainous outskirts of Switzerland, to find out the answers of some of the mysterious questions related to the Universe. The search is for God Particle and this theory alrady exists in India.
This research work was given in a complete book titled “Two Big Bangs Created the Universe” (Formed in Eternal Space) in November 2003, the first copy of which was presented to former President of India Mr. Abdul Kalam, who read the book, discussed with the author and praised it.
This book was authored by Dr. Raj Baldev, Cosmo Theorist from India. In this book, he traced the origin of the God and His Universe. It contains on its page 137-139 and 279 to 301.
This search of scientists is about God Particle, which they believed to have existed at the birth of the Universe as already explained by Dr. Raj Baldev.
Dr. Raj Baldev has already given a clear picture on God Particle for which the scientists are now putting into service Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the largest scientific instrument ever made, in one of the biggest experiments in particle physics beginning June.
The scientists who are making this great research may derive a great advantage of Dr. Raj Baldev's experience, who was the head of SAROUL (Scientifric Advance Research of Universe & Life). But the foreign scientists normally do not attach any importance to Indians.
The story goes as under:
Over the weekend, thousands of people thronged to see parts of the LHC, built in a circular 27 km- tunnel buried 50 to 175 metres beneath the Swiss- French border.
“ I saw such a huge crowd — especially for the most interesting parts. That’s why I left after visiting two buildings,” said filmmaker Jean Ehret, an eager visitor.
The agency behind the $ 6.3 billion ( Rs 25,000 crore) project — European Organisation for Nuclear Research or CERN — is upbeat.
“ The LHC is progressing well,” said Dr James Gillies, head of the communication group at CERN. The experiment involves two counter rotating beams of protons — positively charged sub- atomic particle — moving around the giant ring through cables whipped up by magnets inside a continuous vacuum.
The idea is to smash particles such as protons moving into one another almost as fast as light, recreating conditions that existed a fraction of a second after the Big Bang to see what happened thereafter, when the universe was born.
“ Its operating temperature is 1.9 degrees above absolute zero — about minus 271 degrees C — and we are currently cooling it down,” Gillies said. At the heart of the LHC lie 7,000 kilometres of ‘superconducting’ cables, cooled to a temperature close to absolute zero, which are able to conduct electricity without resistance.
“ The schedule, which I am confident we can keep, foresees the entire LHC being cooled down by the middle of June, allowing the first beams to be injected soon after,” said Dr Robert Aymar, director general of CERN. “ First collisions will follow two months later.
The experiments will be recording data at high energies by the summer,” he added. These data will answer some of the fundamental questions, such as the origin of mass or the nature of the mysterious “dark matter” that fills up a large part of the universe.
When the work starts, the beams will be stored at high energy for hours while collisions take place. Each proton goes around the 27- km ring over 11,000 times a second. A nominal proton beam in the LHC will have an energy equivalent to a person in a Subaru driving at 1,700 kph or an 88,000- tonne Nimitz- class aircraft cruising at 5.6 knots.
India is among several countries collaborating with CERN in this effort. In LHC, the main magnetic dipoles ( equal and opposite poles) have equipment called spool correctors to meet the very high demands of field quality.
These correctors are needed in hundreds. About half of them were made in India through collaboration between CERN and the Centre for Advanced Technology in Indore. India has also supplied LHC magnet support jacks and heater power supplies. Circuit breakers came from Russia, but with Indian electronics. max. martin@ mailtoday. in
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