LHC Scientists Reveal New Plan to Trap Dark Matter, Says Higgs Boson May Be “Portal to The Dark World”
The Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Switzerland has proven itself really good at not making physicists re-do their math. After the detection of the Higgs boson, the famed “god particle” that seems to be the responsible for giving other particles mass, scientists are setting their sights on using the 27-kilometer particle accelerator to to hunt down the elusive dark matter once and for all.

The math says that dark matter keeps all this nonsense from falling apart.
“We know for sure there’s a dark world, and there’s more energy in it than there is in ours.If so, it would mean that dark matter is already created inside the particle accelerator, and all physicists would need to do it just filter it out. Which is much easier said than done. There are more than one billion collisions per second while the LHC is running, and given that dark matter is already invisible, it’s a tough nut to crack.
One particularly interesting possibility is that these long-lived dark particles are coupled to the Higgs boson in some fashion—that the Higgs is actually a portal to the dark world. It’s possible that the Higgs could actually decay into these long-lived particles.”

CERN in Geneva, Switzerland
“If it’s that heavy, it costs energy to produce, so its momentum would not be large—it would move more slowly than the speed of light.”So in order to detect the dark matter particles, scientists would need to be able to detect particles that decay one billionth of a second slower than the rest—something the authors of the paper say is well within the abilities of the LHC. The Large Hadron Collider is currently undergoing improvements and upgrades that will increase it’s effectiveness tenfold, and scientists are already working on building the dark matter trap. When the LHC comes back online in 2021, all three of the particle detectors will be outfitted with the new system. And maybe, just maybe, there will finally be proof that 85% of our universe actually exists.
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