New Update on Higgs Boson makes front page on Huffington Post

by Pterist 3 Replies latest social current

  • Pterist
    Pterist

    By JOHN HEILPRIN 03/14/13 04:29 PM ET EDT AP

    GENEVA — It helps solve one of the most fundamental riddles of the universe: how the Big Bang created something out of nothing 13.7 billion years ago.

    In what could go down as one of the great Eureka! moments in physics – and win somebody the Nobel Prize – scientists said Thursday that after a half-century quest, they are confident they have found a Higgs boson, the elusive subatomic speck sometimes called the "God particle."

    The existence of the particle was theorized in 1964 by the British physicist Peter Higgs to explain why matter has mass. Scientists believe the particle acts like molasses or snow: When other tiny basic building blocks pass through it, they stick together, slow down and form atoms.

    Scientists at CERN, the Geneva-based European Organization for Nuclear Research, announced in July that they had found something that looked like the Higgs boson, but they weren't certain, and they needed to go through the data and rule out the possibility it wasn't something else.

    On Thursday, they said they believe they got it right.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/14/higgs-boson-discovery-confirmed-cern-large-hadron-collider_n_2874975.html

  • Brother of the Hawk
    Brother of the Hawk

    Interesting. Even in school when I would hear the Big Bang Theory I would think, well where did the components come from in the first place if there is no creator?

  • Pterist
    Pterist

    A Higgs Boson walks into the vatican. Pope Francis asks "why are you here" ? the boson replies "I am here cus you can't have Mass without me" ! lmao !

  • glenster
    glenster

    The Higgs boson is often referred to as the "God particle" by individuals
    outside the scientific community, from the title of a 1993 book on the Higgs
    boson and particle physics by Nobel Physics prizewinner and Fermilab director
    Leon Lederman. The book was written in the context of failing US government
    support for the Superconducting Super Collider, a part-constructed titanic
    competitor to the Large Hadron Collider with planned collision energies of 2 ×
    20 TeV that was championed by Lederman since its 1983 inception and shut down in
    1993; the book sought in part to promote awareness of the significance and need
    for such a project in the face of its possible loss of funding.

    While media use of this term may have contributed to wider awareness and in-
    terest, many scientists feel the name is inappropriate since it is sensational
    hyperbole and misleads readers; the particle also has nothing to do with God,
    leaves open numerous questions in fundamental physics, and does not explain the
    ultimate origin of the universe. Higgs, an atheist, was reported to be dis-
    pleased and stated in a 2008 interview that he found it "embarrassing" because
    it was "the kind of misuse... which I think might offend some people".
    Science writer Ian Sample stated in his 2010 book on the search that the nick-
    name is "universally hate[d]" by physicists and perhaps the "worst derided" in
    the history of physics, but that (according to Lederman) the publisher rejected
    all titles mentioning "Higgs" as unimaginative and too unknown.

    Lederman explains his choice with a review of the long human search for know-
    ledge, using an analogy between the impact of the Higgs field on the fundamental
    symmetries at the Big Bang, and the apparent chaos of structures, particles,
    forces and interactions that resulted and shaped our present universe, with the
    biblical story of Babel in which the primordial single language of early Genesis
    was fragmented into many disparate languages and cultures.

    Today ... we have the standard model, which reduces all of reality to a dozen
    or so particles and four forces. ... It's a hard-won simplicity [...and...]
    remarkably accurate. But it is also incomplete and, in fact, internally incon-
    sistent... This boson is so central to the state of physics today, so crucial to
    our final understanding of the structure of matter, yet so elusive, that I have
    given it a nickname: the God Particle. Why God Particle? Two reasons. One, the
    publisher wouldn't let us call it the Goddamn Particle, though that might be a
    more appropriate title, given its villainous nature and the expense it is caus-
    ing. And two, there is a connection, of sorts, to another book, a much older
    one...

    —Leon M. Lederman and Dick Teresi, The God Particle: If the Universe is the
    Answer, What is the Question p. 22

    Lederman whimsically asks whether the Higgs boson was added just to perplex
    and confound those seeking knowledge of the universe, and whether physicists
    will be confounded by it as recounted in that story, or ultimately surmount the
    challenge and understand "how beautiful is the universe [God has] made".
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgs_boson

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