Review of the Safety of LHC Collisions
J. Ellis, G. Giudice, M.L. Mangano, I. Tkachev, U. Wiedemann

TL;DR
This paper reviews and updates the safety assessment of LHC collisions, confirming they pose no danger based on experimental data, cosmic ray comparisons, and theoretical considerations of hypothetical objects like black holes and strangelets.
Contribution
It provides an updated safety analysis of LHC collisions incorporating new experimental results and theoretical insights, reaffirming their safety.
Findings
LHC collisions are safe based on cosmic ray comparisons.
Hypothetical objects like black holes and strangelets pose no risk.
Astronomical observations constrain dangerous production of exotic objects.
Abstract
The safety of collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) was studied in 2003 by the LHC Safety Study Group, who concluded that they presented no danger. Here we review their 2003 analysis in light of additional experimental results and theoretical understanding, which enable us to confirm, update and extend the conclusions of the LHC Safety Study Group. The LHC reproduces in the laboratory, under controlled conditions, collisions at centre-of-mass energies less than those reached in the atmosphere by some of the cosmic rays that have been bombarding the Earth for billions of years. We recall the rates for the collisions of cosmic rays with the Earth, Sun, neutron stars, white dwarfs and other astronomical bodies at energies higher than the LHC. The stability of astronomical bodies indicates that such collisions cannot be dangerous. Specifically, we study the possible production at…
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