Experts weigh in on 'God particle' discovery

   Jul 5, 12:59 pm

Washington, July 5 (ANI): Two lead Caltech physicists, who were involved in the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment to discover Higgs Boson - Dr. Maria Spiropulu and Dr. Harvey Newman, have finally spoken out about their success after years of research to find the elusive particle.

The Higgs Boson is a hypothetical particle that is the quantum of the Higgs field, which is claimed to be the missing link in the Standard Model of the Universe.

The field and the particle provide a testable hypothesis for the origin of mass in elementary particles.

In popular culture, it is called the "God particle", after the title of Nobel physicist Leon Lederman's 'The God Particle: If the Universe Is the Answer, What Is the Question?', which contained the author's assertion that the discovery of the particle is crucial to a final understanding of the structure of matter.

"This discovery bears on the knowledge of how mass comes about at the quantum level, and is the reason we built the LHC. It is an unparalleled achievement," Maria Spiropulu, Professor of Physics at Caltech, said.

"More than a generation of scientists has been waiting for this very moment and particle physicists, engineers, and technicians in universities and laboratories around the globe have been working for many decades to arrive at this crucial fork.

"This is the pivotal moment for us to pause and reflect on the gravity of the discovery, as well as a moment of tremendous intensity to continue the data collection and analyzes; we must measure the quantum properties of the new particle and determine whether it is 'the minimal standard model Higgs' or an imposter-a Higgs lookalike.

"This is an incredible, exciting moment. Even these early results give us important hints as to how mass in the universe came to be.

"Together with hundreds of our colleagues, we have worked for decades to reach this point: building multiple generations of experiments; designing and building detectors to precisely measure photons, electrons, and muons, which are keys to the discovery; and inventing worldwide systems that empower thousands of physicists throughout the world to collaborate day and night, share and analyze the data, and develop the new techniques leading to this great result," she said.

Harvey Newman, Professor of Physics at Caltech, also said that the discovery was a "momentous time".

"This is a momentous time in the history of particle physics and in scientific exploration-the implications are profound. This is experimental science at its best," Newman said.

"A Higgs lookalike would propel us into a new realm of experimentation and physics understanding. Our targets are ambitious; they include probing a vast landscape of particles that could comprise the dark matter of the universe and forces that might even elucidate the cosmological observations of dark energy.

"One of the most exciting aspects of this observation is that the road remains open for a vast range of 'lookalike' alternatives, where any deviation from the Standard Model would point the way to the existence of other new particles or forces of nature," he added. (ANI)

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