CNN 2009-11-16(在线收听

It was supposed to be the greatest science experiment ever, and it's certainly the most expensive. The large hadron collider designed to recreate the Big Bang theory with colliding particles has so far cost nearly 10 billion dollars and counting. Scientists are hoping to catch sight of the theorized but never seen Higgs Boson particle.  The so-called God Particle that gives matter its mass.

 Yes.  But within days of kicking off last year the hadron collider broke down. A Helium leak in the cooling system took about a year to repair. And the latest hiccup, a piece of crusty French bread that found its way into the collider's inner workings disrupting work for weeks. So coincidence or something more, well, according to two physicists the culprit may be the Higgs Boson particle traveling back in time to destroy itself.

Professor Hoger Becker Nilson explains his theory. "It would look as if the future has an influence on what happens today or yesterday. So it would look as if some effect from the future goes back to us today." Prof. Nilson says the Higgs Boson particle may be so important to nature that it ripples back in time to sabotage the machine that created it. Still Professor Nilson doesn't think the Higgs Boson particle managed to place a bit of bad gap to stop the hadron collider. "I think some of these are more like caused by media internet, by the early the God in quotation mark in our model." But as the large hadron collider gears up for yet another try on Monday. You can't help but wonder.
 
Atika Shubert, CNN,London.

 You can refer to a small problem or difficulty as a hiccup, especially if it does not last very long or is easily put right.

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