• jadero@mander.xyz
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    8 months ago

    Off the top of my head, I can’t think of any advance that didn’t at some point depend on people just dicking around to see what they could see.

    “What happens if we spin this stick really really fast against this other stick?”

    “Cool! What happens if we put some dried moss around it?”

    “That’s nuts, man! Hey, I wonder what happens if we toss some of our leftovers in there?”

    “C’mon over here, guys. You gotta taste this!”

    At worst, a project like this keeps a lot of curious people in one place where we can make sure they don’t cause harm with their explorations. At best, whole new industries are founded. Never forget that modern electronics would never have existed without Einstein and Bohr arguing over the behaviour of subatomic particles.

    Say the actual construction cost is $100 billion over 10 years and operational costs are $1 billion a year. Compared to all the stupid and useless stuff we already spend money on, that’s little more than pocket lint. We could extract that much from the spending of one military alliance and it would look like a rounding error. Hell, we could add one cent to the price of each litre of soft drinks, alcoholic beverages, and bottled water and have money left over.

    • Sodis@feddit.de
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      8 months ago

      Yeah, but you could also fund a lot of other research with this budget. The point is, physicists just don’t know, if there are more particles existing. There is no theoretical theory there predicting particles at a certain mass with certain decay channels. They won’t know what to look for. That’s actually already a problem for the LHC. They have this huge amount of data, but when you don’t know, what kind of exotic particles you are looking for and how they behave, you can’t post-process the data accordingly. They are hidden under a massive amounts of particles, that are known already.