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Showing posts with label Higg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Higg. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Eureka! God particle may exist!

  • Scientists 'will say they are 99.99% certain' the particle has been found
  • Leading physicists have been invited to event - sparking speculation that Higgs boson particle has been found
  • 'God Particle' gives particles that make up atoms their mass
  • Fermi Lab in Chicago also 'closing in' on proof of Higgs boson
By Rob Cooper

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2167188/God-particle-Scientists-Cern-expected-announce-Higgs-boson-particle-discovered-Wednesday.html#ixzz1ze6ukgpN

Eureka! Cern announces discovery of Higgs boson 'God particle' »
It was a breakthrough that took almost half a century of deep thought, more than 30 years of painstaking experimentation and a massive £2.6bn machine. Yesterday, scientists said they believed they had...

Physicists celebrate evidence of particle 



To cheers and standing ovations, scientists at the world's biggest atom smasher have claimed the discovery of a new subatomic particle.

They say it's "consistent" with the long-sought Higgs boson that helps explain what gives all matter in the universe size and shape.

"We have now found the missing cornerstone of particle physics," Rolf Heuer, director of the European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN), told scientists.

He said the newly discovered subatomic particle is a boson, but he stopped just shy of claiming outright that it is the Higgs boson itself - an extremely fine distinction.

"As a layman, I think we did it," he told the elated crowd.

"We have a discovery. We have observed a new particle that is consistent with a Higgs boson."

The Higgs boson, which until now has been a theoretical particle, is seen as the key to understanding why matter has mass, which combines with gravity to give an object weight.

The idea is much like gravity and Isaac Newton's discovery of it - gravity was there all the time before Newton explained it.

But now scientists have seen something very much like the Higgs boson and can put that knowledge to further use.

CERN's atom smasher, the $A10 billion Large Hadron Collider on the Swiss-French border, has been creating high-energy collisions of protons to investigate dark matter, antimatter and the creation of the universe, which many theorise occurred in a massive explosion known as the Big Bang.

Two independent teams at CERN said on Wednesday they had both "observed" a new subatomic particle - a boson.

Heuer called it "most probably a Higgs boson but we have to find out what kind of Higgs boson it is".

Asked whether the find is a discovery, Heuer answered, "As a layman, I think we have it. But as a scientist, I have to say, '"What do we have?'"

The leaders of the two CERN teams - Joe Incandela, head of CMS with 2100 scientists, and Fabiola Gianotti, head of ATLAS with 3000 scientists - each presented in complicated scientific terms what was essentially extremely strong evidence of a new particle.

Incandela said it was too soon to say definitively whether it is the "standard model" Higgs that Scottish physicist Peter Higgs and others predicted in the 1960s - part of a standard model theory of physics involving an energy field where particles interact with a key particle, the Higgs boson.

"The" Higgs or "a" Higgs - that was the question on Wednesday.

"It is consistent with a Higgs boson as is needed for the standard model," Heuer said.

"We can only call it a Higgs boson - not the Higgs boson."

Higgs, who was invited to be in the audience, said he also could not yet say if it was part of the standard model.

But he told the audience the discovery appears to be very close to what he predicted.

"It is an incredible thing that it has happened in my lifetime," he said, calling it a huge achievement for the proton-smashing collider built in a 27-kilometre underground tunnel.

The stunning work elicited standing ovations and frequent applause at a packed auditorium in CERN as Gianotti and Incandela each took their turn.

Incandela called it "a Higgs-like particle" and said "we know it must be a boson and it's the heaviest boson ever found".

© 2012 AP

Video preludes Higgs boson announcement
http://newscri.be/link/1779202 - PHYS.ORG.COM