Below is exciting news in the world of physics:

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Excerpt:

ASPEN, Colo. — Signaling a likely end to one of the longest, most 
expensive searches in the history of science, physicists said Wednesday 
that they had discovered a new subatomic particle that looks for all the 
world like the Higgs boson, a key to understanding why there is 
diversity and life in the universe.

Peter Wynn Thompson for The New York Times

Scientists at the Fermilab in Batavia, Ill., on Wednesday watched the 
presentation about the discovery of the Higgs boson, which was shown 
from Geneva.

Like Omar Sharif materializing out of the shimmering desert as a man on 
a camel in “Lawrence of Arabia,” the elusive boson has been coming 
slowly into view since last winter, as the first signals of its 
existence grew until they practically jumped off the chart.

“I think we have it,” said Rolf-Dieter Heuer, the director general of 
CERN, the multinational research center headquartered in Geneva. The 
agency is home to the Large Hadron Collider, the immense particle 
accelerator that produced the new data by colliding protons. The 
findings were announced by two separate teams. Dr. Heuer called the 
discovery “a historic milestone.”

He and others said that it was too soon to know for sure, however, 
whether the new particle is the one predicted by the Standard Model, the 
theory that has ruled physics for the last half-century. The particle is 
predicted to imbue elementary particles with mass. It may be an impostor 
as yet unknown to physics, perhaps the first of many particles yet to be 
discovered.

That possibility is particularly exciting to physicists, as it could 
point the way to new, deeper ideas, beyond the Standard Model, about the 
nature of reality.

For now, some physicists are simply calling it a “Higgslike” particle.

“It’s something that may, in the end, be one of the biggest observations 
of any new phenomena in our field in the last 30 or 40 years,” said Joe 
Incandela, a physicist of the University of California, Santa Barbara, 
and a spokesman for one of the two groups reporting new data on Wednesday.

Here at the Aspen Center for Physics, a retreat for scientists, 
bleary-eyed physicists drank Champagne in the wee hours as word arrived 
via Webcast from CERN. It was a scene duplicated in Melbourne, 
Australia, where physicists had gathered for a major conference, as well 
as in Los Angeles, Chicago, Princeton, New York, London and beyond — 
everywhere that members of a curious species have dedicated their lives 
and fortunes to the search for their origins in a dark universe.

In Geneva, 1,000 people stood in line all night to get into an 
auditorium at CERN, where some attendees noted a rock-concert ambience. 
Peter Higgs, the University of Edinburgh theorist for whom the boson is 
named, entered the meeting to a sustained ovation.

Confirmation of the Higgs boson or something very much like it would 
constitute a rendezvous with destiny for a generation of physicists who 
have believed in the boson for half a century without ever seeing it. 
The finding affirms a grand view of a universe described by simple and 
elegant and symmetrical laws — but one in which everything interesting, 
like ourselves, results from flaws or breaks in that symmetry.

According to the Standard Model, the Higgs boson is the only 
manifestation of an invisible force field, a cosmic molasses that 
permeates space and imbues elementary particles with mass. Particles 
wading through the field gain heft the way a bill going through Congress 
attracts riders and amendments, becoming ever more ponderous.

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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/05/science/cern-physicists-may-have-discovered-higgs-boson-particle.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120705

or

http://tinyurl.com/cksh9nh

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Regards,

LelandJ





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