Physicists: No sign of 'God particle'

LONDON, England (Reuters) --After years of searching and months of sifting 
through data, scientists have still not found the elusive subatomic 
particle that could help to unravel the secrets of the universe, a science 
magazine reported Wednesday.

The Higgs boson, the missing link that could explain why matter has mass 
and other fundamental laws of particle physics, is still missing -- and 
physicists fear it may not exist.

"It's more likely than not that there is no Higgs," John Swain, of 
Northeastern University in Boston, told _New Scientist_ magazine.

Scientists have been searching for the Higgs particle ever since Peter 
Higgs of Edinburgh University first proposed in the 1960s that it could 
explain why matter has mass.

Using the world's largest particle accelerator at the CERN nuclear physics 
lab near Geneva, scientists had hunted for the Higgs boson, which has been 
dubbed the "God particle," until the accelerator was closed late last year.

Accelerators hurl particles at nearly the speed of light on a collision 
course to break them up so scientists can study the nature of matter.

Scientists of the Electroweak Working Group at CERN, who had searched for 
the Higgs, said they had found no evidence of it at the energies where they 
had expected to find it.

"We've eliminated most of the hunting area," Neil Calder, or CERN, told the 
magazine.

New Scientist said the problem for physicists is that, without the Higgs 
particle, they do not have a viable theory of matter.

CERN adjourned the search for the Higgs when it closed the Large 
Electron-Positron accelerator, but it is building a Large Hadron Collider 
that will be able to smash particles at even higher energies in 2007.

Copyright 2001 Reuters.


Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2001/TECH/science/12/06/physics.reut/index.html


Reply via email to