Scientists Nearly Kept This Subatomic Discovery Secret

"I must admit that when I first realized that such a reaction was possible, I was scared."

Hydrogen bomb explosion. (U.S. Dept. of Energy)

Hydrogen bomb explosion. (U.S. Dept. of Energy)

By Diana Crandall

Scientists who recently discovered that small particles can theoretically collide and create a “quarksplosion” eight times more powerful than the nuclear fusion events that occur in hydrogen bombs told Live Science they considered not publishing the discovery.

“If I thought for a microsecond that this had any military applications, I would not have published it,” said Marek Karliner, a particle physicist at Tel Aviv University in Israel who co-authored the paper with Jonathan L. Rosner, from the University of Chicago. The two published their findings this week in the journal Nature.

“I must admit that when I first realized that such a reaction was possible, I was scared,” Karliner noted. “But, luckily, it is a one-trick pony.”

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