Um dia histórico.
Arranca hoje aquela que é tida como a experiência científica mais ambiciosa de sempre, na qual se vai tentar recriar o que o Homem acredita serem "os primeiros instantes do universo".
A experiência está a ser levada a cabo pelo CERN (Centro Europeu de Investigação Nuclear), na fronteira entre a Suíça e a França, onde foi construído o LHC (Large Hadron Collider), um acelerador de partículas - a máquina mais complexa que o homem já construiu, segundo o que se diz. Num túnel com 27 quilómetros de circunferência, construído 100 metros abaixo do solo, foram instalados quatro grandes detectores, no interior dos quais vão produzir-se colisões de protões numa velocidade próxima da luz.
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Em declarações à TSF, Gaspar Barreira, director do Laboratório de Instrumentação e Física Experimental de Partículas, refere que vão ser acelerados «dois feixes de protões em sentido oposto», produzindo choques, que «darão lugar a energias tais que recriam as condições do universo nos primeiros momentos após o Big Bang».
Este projecto foi pensado ao longo de 20 anos, envolvendo mais de 40 países e seis mil cientistas, entre os quais há 200 portugueses.
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Kryon, a experiência do CERN e o Big Bang
Na canalização de 12 de Julho por Lee Carroll, Kryon aborda a experiência que hoje corre as notícias do mundo.
Atrasos na previsão aparte, eis o que foi dito sobre a experiência e sobre o que esta poderá signifiar na história da Ciência:
«Next month [August 2008], a grand experiment takes place. The largest machine on Earth comes online [starts up] studying the smallest things that exist, things that are invisible. We speak now of the large atomic accelerator in Switzerland.
There are many who have said, "This is dangerous." It is not. No more energy will be created there than is present in the barrage of cosmic energy that hits the earth every moment of every second. All they are doing is creating that same energy in a controlled way so that they may study it. They cannot study it when it's random.
They use protons and anti-protons and they speed them up to 90% (+) of the speed of light. Then they crash them into each other in the largest physical experiment that's ever been. Let me tell you what the potentials are, and remember you heard it here first.
[Kryon smile] What they're looking for is interdimensional energy. They are looking for what they suspect must be there, and they will find it. They will find it because they're looking at Universal creative energy. Let me tell you the profundity of what they're about to discover within this next decade: they will re-write the scenario of how the Universe started.
The Big Bang never was (as we have discussed with you many times). The very idea of the Big Bang is a three-dimensional explanation of an interdimensional attribute. Universes are created all the time through interdimensional shift - when one dimension literally collides with another. It's a grand quantum event. This is when you get all of the attributes that you describe as the Big Bang.
A review: In 3D, you had many scientists looking at what they felt was proof of the Big Bang theory. They had found the residual of what they thought was proof (cosmological constant). Names like Hubble and others were at the forefront of this. However, this is now about to be challenged by the observation of the smallest particles known.
First, even the Big Bang theory had to be interdimensional at its beginning. For there is acknowledgment that everything traveled faster than light and everything happened all at once. Back in those days of this theory, it was simply understood that somehow there was a break in 3D for a moment in order to create what you see.
Today that would have been seen as an attribute of a quantum event, and that's what this laboratory will discover, for they are about to see the residual of an interdimensional collision. It's everywhere. It's the new cosmological constant.
Once you begin to see the dimensions that are invisible or at least see the attributes that they trace in the explosions that are artificially created, it will be obvious. All of this is to say to you in this cryptic way that this particular experiment is safe, long term, and your science will finally be able to see interdimensionality at its best.
When nothing happens, and the earth is not swallowed up in a black hole created in Switzerland, will you remember this message? Will you look at those who said otherwise and hold them responsible for the drama they created? We shall see. That was number two.
When there are things on this planet that need for you to be warned about, then watch for a consensus of warning from all of us. Remember HAARP? [Kryon Book Six, 1997] We warned you and you responded. This experiment was seen as dangerous by most of Europe, and steps were taken to temper what the facility could and could not do. When many were watching, it was very difficult to accomplish secret things. Remember this.»

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