Physicists See Best Proof Yet of 'The God Particle'
The announcement today, based on experiments at the Department of
Energy's Fermilab near Chicago and other institutions, is not the final
word, but it's very close. And it comes just before a major meeting this
week in Australia, where more findings will be announced from the giant
underground particle accelerator at CERN, the great physics lab in the
Alps on the French-Swiss border.
"This is one of the cornerstones of how we understand the universe,"
said Rob Roser, a Fermilab physicist, "and if it's not there, we have to
go back and check our assumptions about how the universe exists."
Roser said he expected the CERN scientists to offer more evidence of the
Higgs particle, though they will also be cautious. "The Higgs particle,
if it's real, will show itself in different ways. We need for all of
them to be consistent before we can say for sure we've seen it."
Fermilab has been home to an atom smasher called the Tevatron, which was
shut down last year because CERN's Large Hadron Collider is more
powerful. Scientists who used the Tevatron have been sifting through the
masses of data they collected by sending subatomic particles crashing
into each other at nearly the speed of light.
"During its life, the Tevatron must have produced thousands of Higgs
particles, if they actually exist, and it's up to us to try to find them
in the data we have collected," said Luciano Ristori, a physicist at
Fermilab and the Italian National Institute for Nuclear Physics, in a
statement. "We have developed sophisticated simulation and analysis
programs to identify Higgs-like patterns. Still, it is easier to look
for a friend's face in a sports stadium filled with 100,000 people than
to search for a Higgs-like event among trillions of collisions."
The particle was first proposed in the 1960s by the English physicist
Peter Higgs. The international effort to find it has taken decades,
using tremendous amounts of energy to crash subatomic particles into
each other in giant underground tracks, where they are steered by
magnetic fields. Several different experiments have been done by
independent teams to ensure accuracy.
Finding the Higgs particle would not be of practical value, at least not
yet, but Roser argued that when the electron was first discovered in
1897, nobody guessed how it would lead to the high-tech, wired world we
have today.
Physicists say the Higgs boson would help explain why we, and the rest
of the universe, exist. It would explain why the matter created in the
Big Bang has mass, and is able to coalesce. Without it, as CERN
explained in a background paper, "the universe would be a very different
place…. no ordinary matter as we know it, no chemistry, no biology, and
no people."
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