What do the physicists on this list think about Hawkins recent claim that the Higgs Boson can become metastable at energies above 10^11 GeV and potentially cause the end of the universe by creating an unstoppable vacuum expanding out at the speed of light?
Is there something – theoretically possible -- to this latest conjecture of his, or has Stephen been watching too many Dr. Who reruns?
Sept. 7 (UPI) -- As first discovered by the Sunday Times of the United Kingdom, in the preface of an upcoming book, Starmus, Stephen Hawking claims the Higgs Boson particle, a.k.a. the "God particle," could end the universe. He claims if enough energy is directed at the particle, it could cause space and time to completely collapse. He also claims that we "wouldn't see it coming."
The Higgs Boson particle is said to be the particle that gives matter its mass. "The Higgs potential has the worrisome feature that it might become metastable at energies above 100bn gigaelectronvolts (GeV)," Hawking writes. He claims that under such conditions, it is theoretically possible the particle would cause an unstoppable vacuum to form that would expand at the speed of light.
The likelihood of such an event occurring is apparently very low. According to Hawking, "A particle accelerator that reaches 100bn GeV would be larger than Earth, and is unlikely to be funded in the present economic climate." The end of days scenario is then very theoretical, but he still believe it is possible
My first thought was that this has already happened in an uncountable number of universes but we didn't survive those.
Terren
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From: everyth...@googlegroups.com [mailto:everyth...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of LizR
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2014 9:08 PM
To: everyth...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Higgs Boson particle, a.k.a. the "God particle," could end the universe
If I'm allowed to answer (not being a physicist) ...
I had the impression that this was already considered to be a possibility - that the current state of the universe might be a false vaccuum (or something like that) which could eventually drop into a lower energy state and destroy the current universe, a bit like dropping a chunk of ice-9 in the ocean.
Yes, perhaps the universe finds itself in a metastable valley… some local minima in which the laws (or perhaps the values of key constants) of the universe are amenable to life as we know it… and this is something that is discussed. I remember reading about an experiment where they were seeking to test some ancient uranium source from a mine in Africa that had (I forget the details exactly) but think that it had something to do with having been an ancient source that was concentrated enough for fission to have occurred and they very carefully measured the decay products and isotope remaining in the ore (our time) and by so doing were able to deduce that some key property (maybe it was the nuclear strong force) was exceedingly close to the current values for this force at a point in time billions of years ago. Proving that – even if we are in a valley of metastability that it has lasted a long time.
As Kim pointed out dark energy may eventually rip even the nucleus of atoms apart… as it overwhelms every other force in the universe.
It occurs to me that surely the amount of energy directed at a given region of space (which I assume contains lots of Higgs bosons, or at least the Higgs field) must exceed the specified limit inside things like supernovae and quasars, so presumably if this was likely it would have happened by now???
As Terren pointed out… perhaps it has happened in an uncountable number of other universes.
Personally I see no reason why anything should remain fixed and immutable, including the fundamental laws of the universe. I was more curious if this represented new findings on this interesting subject of the metastable nature of the very fabric of reality.
-Chris
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> I don't think you can get energies like 10^11Gev even in supernova.
> The only place I can think of that might produce that kind of energy is approaching the singularity of a black hole.
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