CERN Physicists See Higgs Boson in New Particle
After rummaging through the data from some 2,000 trillion collisions of subatomic particles in the Large Hadron Collider — more than twice as much data as led to the original discovery — physicists meeting at a workshop in La Thuile, Italy, said that they still did not know if there was only one Higgs boson, as predicted by the Standard Model, the reigning theory in physics, or if the new particle was only the lightest of a whole set of Higgs bosons, a circumstance envisioned by some more advanced and speculative theories.
The verdict will hinge on more detailed measurements of the particle’s properties, like its spin and how it decays relative to other particles. The Higgs boson is supposed to have no spin at all; it is the knuckleball of the subatomic world.
CERN’s collider, just outside Geneva, is now down for two years of repairs, but its teams have stockpiled their unanalyzed data, and look forward to the prospect of more years of high-energy collisions starting in 2015.
By DENNIS OVERBYE