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CERN: Higgs Particle Hunters Are Wanted!

Nov 27, 2014 By Nathan Fortin 2 Comments

CERN - Higgs Particle Hunters Wanted

On Wednesday, a group of US and UK researchers involved in the ATLAS experiment announced they needed volunteers from all over the world to help them examine all 25.000 photos showing super-fast particles moving and dieing inside the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).

The LHC is the world’s largest particles smasher and it was built by the European Organization for Nuclear Research aka CERN. Its initial goal was to collide particles at super-speeds, make them explode and give birth to sub-particles that may help scientists decode the texture of the universe.

For many years, the LHC teams searched for a particular particle called the Higgs boson, or God’s particle. In 2013, LHC confirmed that such a particle was found, although global community was worried the sub-atomic experiments occurring at the Swiss–French border might create a set of mini black holes that would suck all Earth into them.

We are still here, so that didn’t happen. Two of the most important CERN experiments are the CMS (Compact Muon Solenoid) and the ATLAS experiment. Each experiment uses different methods and designs, but they share the same goals. For instance they both have  searched for the Higs boson, and currently they in search of particles that could create dark matter.

Dark matter is an invisible texture that holds the Universe together and it can only be detected from its gravitational effects.

On November 20, CMS team has also made its Open Data Portal (ODP) available to the general public. ODP is a database containing information on real LHC particle collisions. CMS scientists said they made the infos public because they were hoping this would inspire and support more scientists, and even students or amateurs.

This week, ATLAS team of researchers launched another project called Higgs Hunters (they even have a site for it). Higgs Hunters needs on-line volunteers to help  CERN researchers examine all the LHC particle collisions caught on camera. There are currently 25.000 photos to be closely examined.

Scientists say that volunteers can help them track the sub-atomic explosions caused by a dieing Higgs particle and the sub-particles emerging during the process. These sub-particles, scientists believe, will help mankind understand better the origins of the Universe.

 “If anything discovering what happens when a Higgs boson ‘dies’ could be even more exciting than the original discovery that the Higgs boson exists made at CERN back in 2012. We want volunteers to help us go beyond the Higgs boson ‘barrier’ by examining pictures of these collisions and telling us what they see,”

said Professor Alan Barr lead author of the Higgs Hunters project. So, the hunting season is open and Higgs particle hunters are wanted.

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: Alan Barr, ATLAS experiment, CERN, CERN needs particle hunters, CMS experiment, dark matter, Higgs boson, Higgs boson hunting season, Higgs Hunter project, Higgs particle hunters wanted, Large Hadron Collider, LHC

Large Hadron Collider Uncovered Higgs Boson Fermions Decay Mechanism

Jun 24, 2014 By Anne-Marie Jackson 2 Comments

New physics research involving Kansas State University faculty members has helped shed light on how our universe works.

A recently published study in the journal Nature Physics reports scientists have found evidence that the Higgs boson, a fundamental particle proposed in 1964 and discovered in 2012  is the long sought-after particle responsible for giving mass to elementary particles.

Building on the full data collected in 2011 and 2012, part of which was used to identify the Higgs boson’s existence, researchers see evidence that the Higgs boson decays into fermions. This also was predicted in 1964 but not observed until after the Higgs boson was identified in 2012, Kaadze said.

The observation is key in reinforcing what is theorized about the Higgs boson and is a stepping stone to building on more extensive knowledge about how the universe works, Kaadze said. As a group of elementary particles, fermions form the matter while bosons act as force carriers between fermions. According to the standard model of particle physics, the interaction strength between the fermions and the Higgs field must be proportional to their mass.

The discovery of a new boson with a mass of approximately 125 GeV in 2012 at the LHC has heralded a new era in understanding the nature of electroweak symmetry breaking and possibly completing the standard model of particle physics.

Since the first observation in decays to gamma, WW and ZZ boson pairs, an extensive set of measurements of the mass and couplings to W and Z bosons as well as multiple tests of the spin-parity quantum numbers have revealed that the properties of the new boson are consistent with those of the long sought agent responsible for electroweak symmetry breaking.

An important open question is whether the new particle also couples to fermions and in particular to down-type fermions, since the current measurements mainly constrain the couplings to the up-type top quark. In this paper we report the combination of these two channels which results for the first time in strong evidence for the direct coupling of the 125 GeV Higgs boson to down-type fermions with an observed significance of 3.8 standard deviations when 4.4 are expected.

“In nature, there are two types of particles: fermions and bosons,” said Ketino “Keti” Kaadze, a research associate at Fermilab who in August is joining the faculty at Kansas State University’s physics department. “Fermions, quarks and leptons make up all the matter around us. Bosons are responsible for mediating interaction between the elementary particles.”

 

The CMS detector measures the energy and impulse of photons, electrons, muons and other charged particles with high precision. Different measuring instruments are arranged in tiers inside the 12,500-ton detector. 179 institutions worldwide are involved in the construction and operation of the CMS detector. The Swiss institutions are the University of Zurich, ETH Zurich and the Paul Scherrer Institute, which jointly developed and constructed the CMS pixel detector.

Filed Under: Tech & Science Tagged With: 2012, bosons, CMS experiment, Decay, direct decay, Element, fermions, gamma, Higgs boson, Kansas, LHC, particle

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