Researches aren't going to tell you this!


https://archaeology.make-known.com/researchers-are%D0%BFt-goi%D0%BFg-to-tell-you-this/


Watch the following video and see for yourself.


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CERN to test world's most powerful particle accelerator during April's  solar eclipse  to search for 'invisible' matter that secretly powers our universe

Large Hadron Collider will smash atoms together on April 8

The experiment hopes to discover subatomic particles that exist inside atoms


https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-13249813/CERN-accelerator-smash-particles-solar-eclipse.html


The world’s largest and most powerful particle accelerator is set smash protons together on April 8 to search for invisible particles secretly powering our universe.


Theories have suggested there are 17 different particle groups and the European Organization for Nuclear Research, better known as CERN, confirmed the existence of one using its Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in 2012.


Now, the team has restarted the LHC  with hopes of unraveling more mysteries of the universe - specifically dark matter. 


Scientists began preliminary tests by sending billions of protons around the LHC's ring of superconducting magnets to boost their energy and ensure the $4 billion machine was in working condition.


And next month, CERN will shoot them down a 17-mile-long tunnel at nearly the speed of light to recreate conditions a second after the Big Bang.


The purpose of LHC is to let scientists test predictions of different particle physics, including measuring the properties of the Higgs boson or God particle, which was a missing piece in the jigsaw for physicists in trying to understand how the universe works.


Scientists believe that a fraction of a second after the Big Bang that gave birth to the universe, an invisible energy field, called the Higgs field, formed. 


As particles passed through the field, they picked up mass, giving them size and shape and allowing them to form the atoms that make up you, everything around you and everything in the universe.


The LHC is typically used just one month each year, but has been shut down over long periods for upgrades - it was last turned off in 2022 amid Europe’s energy crisis.


Firing up the LHC is a complex process, requiring everything to 'work like an orchestra.’


Rende Steerenberg, in charge of control room operations at CERN in Switzerland, said in 2022: ‘This comes with a certain sense of tension, nervousness,' he explained, adding that a lot can go wrong, including obstructions in the tunnel and issues with magnets.’


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