An artist's impression of a supermassive black hole with an ejecta jet moving at close to the speed of light. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)
Despite huge costs, long construction times, and cuts in federal science funding by the Trump administration, physicists have come up with a more cost-effective option for the next generation of super particle colliders: the ability to study black holes.
Scientists had originally hoped that the elusive particles that make up dark matter would be ejected by high-energy proton collisions inside CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC), but nothing of the sort has been detected so far.
Thus, detecting dark matter may require decades of waiting until new, higher-energy supercolliders are built.
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