Comment author:Tuna-Fish
26 March 2010 01:35:03PM
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Actually, assuming many-worlds and Higgs-Boson-ends-the-world, the world could have ended every time a sufficiently powerful cosmic ray hit the ground in a way that Higgs boson formed. We just live in the branch where that never happened.
Apparently they assume no Higgs bosons from the high energy cosmic rays, anymore. Why?
Is the situation inside the working LHC an entirely new ballgame?
Is there nothing like Higgs boson at all, as we see no Tutu hamster in the sky?
Or it will be quite a dull party at CERN, when something nonremarkable (like Higgs boson) will maybe be discovered?
Actually, assuming many-worlds and Higgs-Boson-ends-the-world, the world could have ended every time a sufficiently powerful cosmic ray hit the ground in a way that Higgs boson formed. We just live in the branch where that never happened.
(sorry for late reply)