English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-07-29 17:44:06 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

4 answers

Personally, I doubt it.
Though my coworkers would lynch me if
they knew I wrote that.

Also, there are many possible Higgs bosons so it
should be phrased, "Will the LHC at CERN find a Higgs
boson?".

And, it will not likely happen, if ever, until well after
turn on (so not for a couple/few years).

2006-07-29 17:50:05 · answer #1 · answered by PoohP 4 · 0 1

there isn't any indication of sabotage. And if there have been, i could greater suspect the tin-foil hat crowd that thinks it is going to create a black hollow and swallow the earth. CERN is desperate to restart in september. The tevatron has taken great element approximately cern's downtime to pork themselves as much as the element that this is predicted to be a tossup to whether tevatron or cern is first to accomplish a higgs seek. The higgs bosun is a predicted quantum particle that provides remember its mass. If chanced on, we would finally have a sturdy answer to furnish each and all of the morons working around right here who ask "nicely the place did the flexibility come from that created all this from no longer something?"

2016-10-01 06:08:52 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Higgs boson is a fictitious particle.

The standard model is an excuse for physicist to use more and more money to discover the obvious: that particles are waves, and gravity is electromagnetic.

This was known at the turn of the 20th century, and just requires looking at the facts we know today, rather than some super complex and expensive device that no one can understand anyway.

2006-07-29 18:07:50 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

ya i am quite sure

2006-07-29 17:50:01 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers