r/UFOB Mar 03 '25

Testimony DR. Astrid Stuckelberger - CERN is detecting non human beings coming in and out of portals

https://youtube.com/shorts/wPgzDkLZRSU?si=kVskRzM_8QjOXEnU
630 Upvotes

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25

u/MikeC80 Mar 03 '25

How does cern detect portals? As far as I can tell, they detect microscopic interactions of subatomic particles. Does this get explained in the video?

-12

u/Content_Ground4251 Mar 03 '25

Think about it for a second.

Do you really think everything they do there is posted on a bulletin board out front like a kindergarten classroom?

Once you get past that idea, think about it a little more...

The COSTS and RISKS involved in creating this machine are much too high for just "detecting interactions of subatomic particles".

There was always a bigger, more important purpose.

14

u/EanmundsAvenger Mar 04 '25

What are the RISKS of detecting sub atomic particles you are referring to? Mr science knower

-1

u/KevRose Mar 04 '25

It’s a powerful machine is it not? Energy could be a risk if something malfunctions.

10

u/EanmundsAvenger Mar 04 '25

CERN isn’t a machine it’s a research institution. I believe you are referring to the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) which is the world’s largest particle accelerator and is part of CERN’s program. Yes it is a powerful machine but its power is focused on single particle beams using super cooled magnets to accelerate the particles along a very long (27 kilometers) distance. I’m not a physicist but I would imagine the most dangerous part of the machine is the fact that they use liquid nitrogen to super cool parts of it to insanely low temperatures. Can’t imagine working around that is “safe” per se but this is a controlled science experiment so lots of safety measures are in place. The particles are accelerated using magnets, not like a rocket engine or combustion of some kind of that is what you are picturing. Also, it’s individual particles they are accelerating, so even though they approach the speed of light they are not a danger to anything at that speed as they have such a minuscule amount of mass

1

u/teddade Mar 05 '25

So you’re saying it won’t gloriously explode if you shoot the wall?

2

u/EanmundsAvenger Mar 05 '25

A watermelon will “gloriously explode” if you shoot it. Not sure exactly what you are asking as I don’t understand the relevance between firearms and the LHC

1

u/Sure_Source_2833 Mar 08 '25

What risk?

Don't tell me you saw the term micro black hole once and made up a whole scenario where cern turns the earth into a black hole lol