The Higgs Boson

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Message 1176613 - Posted: 8 Dec 2011, 23:30:45 UTC

Could it really be?....
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=higgs-lhc&WT.mc_id=SA_CAT_SPC_20111208

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Message 1176648 - Posted: 9 Dec 2011, 1:42:12 UTC - in response to Message 1176639.  

if I read the article correctly they are 99.7% sure that they have found it. That would satisfy most hypothesis tests. In science they need to be even more sure--that will come with more time.
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Message 1176685 - Posted: 9 Dec 2011, 5:10:05 UTC

We at Test4Theory@home have been told by dr.Ben Segal to wait for the official announcement.Wait and see.
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Message 1176837 - Posted: 9 Dec 2011, 18:19:52 UTC

I'll have to read-up on this subject regarding the Higgs Boson.
"Boson" is this similar to the photon Boson structure?
The Kite Fliers

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Kite fliers: An imaginary club of solo members, those who don't yet
belong to a formal team so "fly their own kites" - as the saying goes.
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Message 1176857 - Posted: 9 Dec 2011, 19:33:40 UTC - in response to Message 1176837.  

A boson is a particle with integer spin so it does not have to obey the Pauli exclusion principle. Any number of bosons can occupy the same energy level, forming a boson conglomerate.It obeys the Bose-Einstein statistics, hence its name.
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Message 1177010 - Posted: 10 Dec 2011, 7:31:48 UTC

So. if they do conclude that the Higgs Boson exists which theories get ditched and which ones get a new lease on life?
Bob DeWoody

My motto: Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow as it may not be required. This no longer applies in light of current events.
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Message 1177016 - Posted: 10 Dec 2011, 8:00:34 UTC - in response to Message 1177010.  

The Standard Model would be confirmed. But look at the CERN Bulletin site, it says that the G-2 anomaly of the muon magnetic moment is still valid and that is contrary to the Standard Model. So all depends on your choice, as ever.
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Message 1177041 - Posted: 10 Dec 2011, 13:12:51 UTC

What impresses me is that we are figuring things out. We are gradually increasing our understanding through observation and mathmatics. Being wrong is not a problem. Not knowing is not a problem. Figuring things out is just plain fantastic!

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Message 1177050 - Posted: 10 Dec 2011, 14:01:50 UTC - in response to Message 1177041.  
Last modified: 10 Dec 2011, 14:02:28 UTC

The problem is that every new instrument, be it a new accelerator or a new telescope, costs a lot more. Hence it must give results, otherways what are the scientists to tell the taxpayers who financed its costs? This was pointed out by Emilio Segre'. Nobel winning physicist, already in 1972. The people at CERN were much troubled if they had to admit that the Higgs boson does not exist.Now they will be happy to announce that it exists, and I will be happy too, since I am helping them with my computer running Test4Theory@home. But real discoveries come often by surprise or serendipity, like the neutrino discovery. There they were looking for one aspect of the neutrino and found another, much more intriguing. Now they shall ask to use the LHC, much more powerful than the SPS, to produce the neutrino beams from Geneve to Gran Sasso. Lovely places both.
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Message 1177058 - Posted: 10 Dec 2011, 14:24:55 UTC - in response to Message 1177050.  

The problem is that every new instrument, be it a new accelerator or a new telescope, costs a lot more. Hence it must give results, otherways what are the scientists to tell the taxpayers who financed its costs? This was pointed out by Emilio Segre'. Nobel winning physicist, already in 1972. The people at CERN were much troubled if they had to admit that the Higgs boson does not exist.Now they will be happy to announce that it exists, and I will be happy too, since I am helping them with my computer running Test4Theory@home. But real discoveries come often by surprise or serendipity, like the neutrino discovery. There they were looking for one aspect of the neutrino and found another, much more intriguing. Now they shall ask to use the LHC, much more powerful than the SPS, to produce the neutrino beams from Geneve to Gran Sasso. Lovely places both.
Tullio

That reminds me of my work place. They have a mantra of if they don't see substancial return on investment within a given time period, they won't put the dollars in. The problem with that view, is that by putting the dollars in, they solidify their long term position in the ability to produce goods in a streamlined manner. There are several projects I am thinking about that would greatly increase the through put of the factory, but have been sidelined to make asthetic changes to the building, which in the long run won't add to "getting product out the door" at all.

Steve
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Message 1177101 - Posted: 10 Dec 2011, 17:17:26 UTC
Last modified: 10 Dec 2011, 17:36:31 UTC

As a postscript, I have read in New Scientist that a Cambridge physicist, Jayant Narlikar, had proposed in 1963 that neutrinos could travel back in time in a Big Bang universe. He was a proposer of the steady state theory with Herman Bondi, Thomas Gold and Fred Hoyle, abandoned by many after the discovery of the cosmic microwave background in 1965. Superluminal neutrinos could, according to relativity, travel back in time. Now the OPERA result seems to support Big Bang. You pays your money and you takes your choice.
Tullio
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Message 1177188 - Posted: 11 Dec 2011, 5:27:46 UTC

I'm going to play the Devil's advocate here for a minute. OK, they spent billions to discover these new but predicted particles. In what way has this discovery improved the day to day life of the average citizen of the planet. Will it help farmers grow larger and better crops. Will it improve the air that we breathe or the water that we drink? Will it make transportation safer? Will it control the weather or make day to day living safer? Will it keep terrorists from committing acts of senseless violence? Is it going to make interstellar space travel possible and better yet practical? The taxpayers of the world footed the bill for these discoveries so I think those are valid questions.

But like I have always said about the space program most all of the money was spent to pay people to do jobs so in that sense it was money well spent.
Bob DeWoody

My motto: Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow as it may not be required. This no longer applies in light of current events.
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Message 1177204 - Posted: 11 Dec 2011, 8:36:06 UTC

Four thousand people are working at CERN, mostly young. 250 of them are Italians, including the Scientific Director, Sergio Bertolucci, and the leaders of the Atlas experiment, Fabiola Gianotti, and the CMS experiment, Guido Tonelli. In a time in which Italy is often laughed at because of its politicians, as an Italian taxpayer and a retired theoretical physicist, I think they are earning they paychecks.
Tullio
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Message 1177365 - Posted: 12 Dec 2011, 0:11:47 UTC

Interesting, but like any scientist or mathematician, I don't like uncertainty. I'll celebrate once the official confirmation is given, like the neutrinos supposedly traveling faster than light.
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Message 1177414 - Posted: 12 Dec 2011, 7:46:48 UTC - in response to Message 1177365.  
Last modified: 12 Dec 2011, 8:22:44 UTC

Wait until tomorrow. We shall know if the Higgs boson exists or not.
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Message 1177428 - Posted: 12 Dec 2011, 9:47:17 UTC - in response to Message 1177188.  

I'm going to play the Devil's advocate here for a minute. OK, they spent billions to discover these new but predicted particles. In what way has this discovery improved the day to day life of the average citizen of the planet. Will it help farmers grow larger and better crops. Will it improve the air that we breathe or the water that we drink? Will it make transportation safer? Will it control the weather or make day to day living safer? Will it keep terrorists from committing acts of senseless violence? Is it going to make interstellar space travel possible and better yet practical? The taxpayers of the world footed the bill for these discoveries so I think those are valid questions.

But like I have always said about the space program most all of the money was spent to pay people to do jobs so in that sense it was money well spent.


Though probably a myth, Faraday supposedly said "what use is a newborn baby?" when asked about his work in electromagnetism. Pure science seldom has any immediate application but often eventually proves to have uses.
Pure mathematics is, in its way, the poetry of logical ideas.

Albert Einstein
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Message 1177435 - Posted: 12 Dec 2011, 10:32:02 UTC
Last modified: 12 Dec 2011, 10:32:41 UTC

The toast to the electron made in 1897 at the Cambridge Cavendish Laboratory was: to the electron! May it remain useless to anybody.
Tullio
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Message 1177484 - Posted: 12 Dec 2011, 16:04:10 UTC - in response to Message 1177435.  

I think it was LaPlace who said 'Here's to abstract mathematics, may never be of any use to anyone."
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Message 1177506 - Posted: 12 Dec 2011, 17:27:55 UTC - in response to Message 1177484.  
Last modified: 12 Dec 2011, 18:21:48 UTC

I think it was HOMER who said "Beer, the solution to all lifes problems"
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Message 1177539 - Posted: 12 Dec 2011, 18:08:54 UTC

Mathematics is music for the soul.
Music is mathematics for the soul.
(this definitions is not mine).
Tullio
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Message boards : Science (non-SETI) : The Higgs Boson


 
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