The Large Hadron Collider is working better than expected. And it has collected oodles of data. But have they found the Higgs, yet? We asked Scientific American’s Davide Castelvecchi, who flew to Geneva to find out.
Tag Archives: Higgs boson
Have we found the Higgs, yet?
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Tagged Anna Armstrong, ATLAS, Big Science, CERN, CMS, Davide Castelvecchi, Ed Gerstner, Higgs boson, Higgs field, Large Hadron Collider, leptons, LHC, mass, particle physics, physics, quarks, Resonance FM, science
Higgs update
Particle Physics, or more accurately High Energy Particle Physics, is arguably the most elegant, the most poetic, the most beautiful branches of the physical sciences. In 1969, Robert Wilson – the man responsible for the construction of Fermilab, the National Accelerator Facility in Illinois, was called to justify the multimillion-dollar machine to the Congressional Joint […]
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Tagged Anna Armstrong, ATLAS, Big Science, CERN, CMS, Ed Gerstner, Fermilab, Higgs boson, Higgs field, Jonathan Butterworth, Large Hadron Collider, leptons, LHC, mass, particle physics, physics, quarks, Resonance FM, science, UCL
What IS a Higgs boson, anyway?
So what the hell is a hadron, and why are they colliding large ones to find a Higgs botswain?
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Tagged Anna Armstrong, Big Science, CERN, Ed Gerstner, Higgs boson, Large Hadron Collider, LHC, particle physics, physics, Resonance FM, science, Standard Model