[color=violet:662332aad8]Advances in Multi-Dimensional Research: The Tiny Black Holes [/color:662332aad8]    The classical description of a black hole is a gargantuan   jet-black entity that's far, far away, that insatiably consumes   any matter or even light that comes near it. Some   physicists suggest the possibility of different forms of   black holes. Extremely tiny, lightweight versions of black   holes could be formed right over our heads when cosmic   rays strike atoms or molecules in the atmosphere. These   newly created black holes would then quickly decay, raining   down harmless secondary particles onto our planet and its   inhabitants.    If the existence of tiny black holes were confirmed, it   would substantiate one of the more outlandish ideas   currently circulating in the physics community, that is, that   we live in a universe with detectable dimensions   beyond the three of space and the one of time to which   we're accustomed.    Since the 1970s, scientific interest in other dimensions   surged as physicists developed the string theory. But   those dimensions are so small that they are undetectable   with our current methods. About four years ago, three   theorists came up with a bold proposal. Savas Dimopoulos   of Stanford University and his coworkers suggested that   some of those other dimensions weren't so small. Another   dimension might even be as large as a millimeter in radius.   This new hypothesis not only raised the possibility of the   existence of very small black holes, but also provides a   possible way to detect the other dimensions. In the relatively   large other dimensions, gravity would be much stronger   and would compress matter and energy into minuscule   black holes. If indeed a tiny black hole is discovered, it will   prove the existence of other dimensions.     Some researchers are now recording signs of tiny black   holes. This was initially accomplished by searching for   distinctive particle showers that would be triggered by any   miniature black holes in the atmosphere. Feng of MIT   and his coworker calculated rates for atmospheric black   hole production from cosmic rays. Cosmic rays would produce   a few atmospheric black holes somewhere in Earth's   atmosphere every minute. This was reported in   "Physical Review Letters," January 14, 2002. A vast new   cosmic-ray detector, called the Pierre Auger Observatory, is   now under construction in Argentina to detect small black holes.    Physicists at a powerful new collider, expected to begin   operating in 2007, would be the next to observe black holes.   In this case, tiny black holes would form as a result of   super high energy, head-on collisions between protons. In   the Oct. 15, 2001 "Physical Review Letters," Dimopoulos and   his coworker predicted that the large Hadron Collider may   generate a black hole every second. About the same time,   another pair of researchers independently came to similar   conclusions.     The current scientific understanding of the tiny black holes   and other dimensions is purely theoretical. It is even further   beyond the imagination to understand the matter in other   dimensions and the laws that govern it. The other dimensions   may soon become a known reality. This will break the   boundaries of modern science, so the mankind's understanding   of the whole universe will fundamentally change. 
             
         
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