God Particle Found
The God particle which helps explain Creation and the Big Bang has been
found.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/14/higgs-boson-discovery-confirmed-cern...
Higgs Boson Discovery Confirmed After Physicists Review
Large Hadron Collider Data At CERN
03/14/13 09:28 AM ET EDT
GENEVA — The search is all but over for a subatomic particle that is a
crucial building block of the universe.
Physicists announced Thursday they believe they have discovered the subatomic
particle predicted nearly a half-century ago, which will go a long way toward
explaining what gives electrons and all matter in the universe size and shape.
The elusive particle, called a Higgs boson, was predicted in 1964 to help
fill in our understanding of the creation of the universe, which many theorize
occurred in a massive explosion known as the Big Bang. The particle was named
for Peter Higgs, one of the physicists who proposed its existence, but it later
became popularly known as the "God particle."
The discovery would be a strong contender for the Nobel Prize. Last July,
scientists at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, announced
finding a particle they described as Higgs-like, but they stopped short of
saying conclusively that it was the same particle or was some version of it.
Scientists have now finished going through the entire set of data.
"The preliminary results with the full 2012 data set are magnificent and
to me it is clear that we are dealing with a Higgs boson, though we still have a
long way to go to know what kind of Higgs boson it is," said Joe Incandela,
a physicist who heads one of the two main teams at CERN, each involving several
thousand scientists.
Whether or not it is a Higgs boson is demonstrated by how it interacts with
other particles and its quantum properties, CERN said in the statement. After
checking, scientists said the data "strongly indicates that it is a Higgs
boson."
The results were announced in a statement by the Geneva-based CERN and
released at a physics conference in the Italian Alps.
CERN's atom smasher, the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider that lies beneath
the Swiss-French border, has been creating high-energy collisions of protons to
investigate how the universe came to be the way it is.
The particle's existence helps confirm the theory that objects gain their
size and shape when particles interact in an energy field with a key particle,
the Higgs boson. The more they attract, so the theory goes, the bigger their
mass will be.