Ok, so here is what figuring out the Higgs Boson completely would get us:
1). Mass drivers (down the road)
2). Understanding of massiveness and spacial occupation.
3). Understanding of degenerate matter momentum phenomena
4). Quark superstructure.
5). Understanding of plasma liquid phase matter
6). Possible application of pure alchemy (technology would require enormous evolution, because it requires subatomic rearrangement.)
The LHC "could" form blackholes, but the only way that is possible (I did a few more calculations taking into account T/Sig dualistic 3/2+ quarks this time as the heaviest free "matter" that cannot undergo hadronization and thus would be free and/or d-matter), and with their angular momentum upon collision, you could in theory create a blackhole. However, the size of said blackhole would be around the size of a single u-Baryon, soooo... it would last approx 1-2 femtoseconds. If you are not familiar with ultra low metrics, that is the following fraction of a second:
1/1,000,000,000,000,000 of a second. Or, from another angle, 1/1000th of a billionth of a second. Why? Because, at that size, the tiny blackhole emits a massive amount of Hawking radiation, while being able to absorb no mass (an amount so tiny, it isn't even measurable) The blackhole would blink into existence, and then blink out. Our electrons may not even be able to see most of them because they literally won't last long enough to detect.
If you are confused by this, it is ok. Most of this stuff doesn't even make sense to us physicists.
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