New results
indicate that particle discovered at CERN is a Higgs boson
New results
indicate that particle discovered at CERN is a Higgs
boson
At the Moriond Conference today, the ATLAS and CMS collaborations at CERN1’s
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) presented preliminary new results that further
elucidate the particle discovered last year. Having analysed two and a half
times more data than was available for the discovery announcement in July, they
find that the new particle is looking more and more like a Higgs boson, the
particle linked to the mechanism that gives mass to elementary particles. It
remains an open question, however, whether this is the Higgs boson of the
Standard Model of particle physics, or possibly the lightest of several bosons
predicted in some theories that go beyond the Standard Model. Finding the answer
to this question will take time.
Whether or not it is a Higgs boson
is demonstrated by how it interacts with other particles, and its quantum
properties. For example, a Higgs boson is postulated to have no spin, and in the
Standard Model its parity – a measure of how its mirror image behaves – should
be positive. CMS and ATLAS have compared a number of options for the spin-parity
of this particle, and these all prefer no spin and positive parity. This,
coupled with the measured interactions of the new particle with other particles,
strongly indicates that it is a Higgs boson.
“The preliminary results with the
full 2012 data set are magnificent and to me it is clear that we are dealing
with a Higgs boson though we still have a long way to go to know what kind of
Higgs boson it is.” said CMS spokesperson Joe
Incandela.
"The beautiful new results represent
a huge effort by many dedicated people. They point to the new particle having
the spin-parity of a Higgs boson as in the Standard Model. We are now well
started on the measurement programme in the Higgs sector," said ATLAS
spokesperson Dave Charlton.
To determine if this is the Standard
Model Higgs boson, the collaborations have, for example, to measure precisely
the rate at which the boson decays into other particles and compare the results
to the predictions. The detection of the boson is a very rare event - it takes
around 1 trillion (1012) proton-proton collisions for each observed event. To
characterize all of the decay modes will require much more data from the
LHC.
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