Hello Alchemist CLub Members,
This is a major discovery. For those of you who really want to understand the true nature of science. Try your best to research what is the Higgs Boson. I am only here to guide you kids in the right path. It's your job to continue the journey.
Peace in the East,
Mr. Ronelus
by Adrian Cho
Eight months ago, physicists working with the world’s biggest atom
smasher—Europe’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC)—created a sensation when
they reported that they had discovered a particle that appeared to be the long-sought Higgs boson,
the last missing piece in their standard model of particles and forces.
Today, those researchers reported that the particle does indeed have
the basic predicted properties of the standard model Higgs boson,
clinching the identification.
“It sure does look like the standard model Higgs boson, you bet,”
says Sally Dawson, a theorist at Brookhaven National Laboratory in
Upton, New York, who was not involved with the measurements.
It’s a big step, at least semantically. Ever since the new particle
was reported last July, officials at the home of the LHC—the European
particle physics laboratory, CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland—have taken
great care to describe the new thing as a “Higgs-like particle.” Now, a CERN press release calls the particle “a Higgs boson.” “That’s a big deal for the community,” Dawson says.
To make the positive identification, researchers relied not on dental
records, but on observations of how the Higgs boson decays into
combinations of other, more familiar particles. Key characteristics of
the Higgs include its spin and its parity, a symmetry property. They can
be determined by looking at correlations in the particle directions
when, for example, a Higgs boson decays into two particles called Z
bosons, each of which then decays into two particles called muons…
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