- Jul 7, 2003
- 47,641
...you might not want to bother.
The European Centre for Particle Physics (CERN) switches on its Large Hadron Collider on Wednesday, a 26 mile underground tunnel, designed to create mini black holes by firing atoms at each other, and thus expanding on mankind's understanding of "dark matter".
A German professor has launched a lawsuit in response to this, claiming that the probability of the world being sucked into a giant black hole as a result is a violation of his right to life under the European Convention of Human Rights.
So anyway, just to be on the safe side, it's been nice knowing you all, and thank God Yeovil is pay on the gate.
The European Centre for Particle Physics (CERN) switches on its Large Hadron Collider on Wednesday, a 26 mile underground tunnel, designed to create mini black holes by firing atoms at each other, and thus expanding on mankind's understanding of "dark matter".
A German professor has launched a lawsuit in response to this, claiming that the probability of the world being sucked into a giant black hole as a result is a violation of his right to life under the European Convention of Human Rights.
So anyway, just to be on the safe side, it's been nice knowing you all, and thank God Yeovil is pay on the gate.