PlanetFrnd
Head Coach
Big things happening at CERN this year...
I thought I already posted something somewhere else about experimental findings at CERN that showed neutrinos moving faster than light (mid-Nov) and this week experimental data showed particle decay potentially of the elusive Higgs Boson... a theoretical "missing particle," if you will, which gives particles their mass... very cool stuff this year...
Higgs boson discovery:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=cern-physicists-find-hint-of-higgs-2011-12
http://www.economist.com/node/21541797
And some background from 1999
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=what-exactly-is-the-higgs
I thought I already posted something somewhere else about experimental findings at CERN that showed neutrinos moving faster than light (mid-Nov) and this week experimental data showed particle decay potentially of the elusive Higgs Boson... a theoretical "missing particle," if you will, which gives particles their mass... very cool stuff this year...
Higgs boson discovery:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=cern-physicists-find-hint-of-higgs-2011-12
CERN physicists find hint of Higgs boson
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
These red lines show how the LHC's Atlas experiment registered the arrival of four particles called muons. They could have been the byproducts of a short-lived Higgs boson--or they could have been more humdrum events. CERN's LHC particle accelerator will continue smashing protons into each other to spot the statistical significance that means the Higgs really has been found.
(Credit: CERN)
Researchers at the CERN particle accelerator have found "intriguing hints" of the Higgs boson, a moment of major progress in years of previously unfruitful searching for the elusive subatomic particle.
The search for the Higgs boson is the top priority of CERN's massive and expensive Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Switzerland. Its Atlas experiment showed a statistically suspicious increase in activity that indicates the Higgs could be pinned down with a mass of 126 giga-electron-volts, and showing some important agreement, its independent CMS experiment found a possible result nearby at 124GeV.
"We observe an excess of events around mass of about 126 GeV," CERN physicist and Atlas leader Fabiola Gianotti said in slides presented today at a CERN seminar to physicists who applauded her results. That equates to about 212 quintillionths of a gram; by comparison, a proton is more than 100 times lighter with a mass of 0.938GeV...
http://www.economist.com/node/21541797
The Higgs boson
Fantasy turned reality
Those searching for the Higgs boson may at last have cornered their quarry
Dec 14th 2011 | from the print edition
WELL, they've found it. Possibly. Maybe. Pinning down physicists about whether they have actually discovered the Higgs boson is almost as hard as tracking down the elusive subatomic beast itself. Leon Lederman, a leading researcher in the field, once dubbed it the "goddamn" particle, because it has proved so hard to isolate. That name was changed by a sniffy editor to the "God" particle, and a legend was born. Headline writers loved it. Physicists loved the publicity. CERN, the world's biggest particle-physics laboratory, and the centre of the hunt for the Higgs, used that publicity to help keep the money flowing.
And this week it may all have paid off. On December 13th two of the researchers at CERN's headquarters in Geneva announced to a breathless world something that looks encouragingly Higgsy.
The Higgs boson, for those who have not been paying attention to the minutiae of particle physics over the past few years, is a theoretical construct dreamed up in 1964 by a British researcher, Peter Higgs (pictured above), and five other, less famous individuals. It is the last unobserved piece of the Standard Model, the most convincing explanation available for the way the universe works in all of its aspects except gravity (which is dealt with by the general theory of relativity).
The Standard Model (see table) includes familiar particles such as electrons and photons, and esoteric ones like the W and Z bosons, which carry something called the weak nuclear force. Most bosons are messenger particles that cement the others, known as fermions, together. They do so via electromagnetism and the weak and strong nuclear forces. The purpose of the Higgs boson, however, is different. It is to inculcate mass into those particles which weigh something. Without it, or something like it, some of the Standard Model's particles that actually do have mass (particularly the W and Z bosons) would be predicted to be massless. Without it, in other words, the Standard Model would not work.
The announcement, by Fabiola Gianotti and Guido Tonelli - the heads, respectively, of two experiments at CERN known as ATLAS and CMS - was that both of their machines have seen phenomena which look like traces of the Higgs...
And some background from 1999
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=what-exactly-is-the-higgs
What exactly is the Higgs boson? Have physicists proved that it really exists?
October 21, 1999 | 20
Stephen Reucroft in the Elementary Particle Physics group at Northeastern University gives this introductory reply: "Over the past few decades, particle physicists have developed an elegant theoretical model (the Standard Model) that gives a framework for our current understanding of the fundamental particles and forces of nature. One major ingredient in this model is a hypothetical, ubiquitous quantum field that is supposed to be responsible for giving particles their masses (this field would answer the basic question of why particles have the masses they do--or indeed, why they have any mass at all). This field is called the Higgs field. As a consequence of wave-particle duality, all quantum fields have a fundamental particle associated with them. The particle associated with the Higgs field is called the Higgs boson...