If you have been keeping up-to-date on the work that's being done at CERN with the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), then you probably already know that updates were in the works. Unfortunately, things didn't exactly go as planned.

After taking two years off for scheduled maintenance, the LHC resumed its major work in March of 2015. However, as physicist John Colbert from the University of West Argenteuil notes, the 4,0oo,ooo trillion dollar operation was brought to a halt by an error in measurement.

Collision captured at the LHC. Credit: CERN

Ultimately, the previous LHC was 17 miles (27 km) in length; however, in order to make it really effective, scientists decided to increase the size of the device by 1.3 miles (2.09 km). Professor Harry Kim, from the University of Upper Gananda, notes that there was some miscommunication between the American and non-American scientists in relation to this upgrade.

To make a long story short, the mathematicians responsible for ensuring proper conversions failed in their calculations. In the end, the American scientists, who were entrusted with building the right side of the new section, converted the number wrong. When 1.3 miles is converted into metric, the number isn't exactly 2.09 km—and herein lies the problem. It's 2.09215 km, to be exact. But the mathematicians decided to round the number, and due to some seriously faulty rounding, the American scientists made their section 3 km long (as opposed to the required 2.09).

Unfortunately, the error wasn't noted until the physicists went to put the new section in the ground. As they attempted to lower this section into place, they quickly realized their error, as they hadn't made a large enough hole, and (sadly) the new section was bent in half.

Right. In. Half.

This is unfortunate news, as the LHC is humanity’s most powerful and expensive tool for investigating matter at a subatomic level.

Yet, scientists are not deterred. Kim said that we do have some options: "I think that, together, people are capable of nearly anything. And I can throw really hard. So if I try, and maybe some people help me train, I'm confident that...eventually...I can hurl subatomic particles together fast enough to accomplish the exact same thing as the LHC. Additionally, I can see this being an excellent team building exercise. Nothing brings people together quite like a big bang simulation."

Of course, some were a bit skeptical of Kim's claims; however, when I asked him via email whether or not he thought that he really could throw protons fast enough, and with enough accuracy, that he could make them collide and, thereby, simulate the events that transpired shortly after the universe formed, he said that I had insulted him, and that we would have to engage in a rousing bout of fisticuffs in order to settle the matter.

So alas, I will have to cut this report short in order to prepare for my epic fight. Wish me well, kind friends. Also, have a happy April Fool's.

 


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