Unexpected hadreng

evince

Truthmatters
I screwed up the title

Unexpected Haydron collider experiment result



The measurement is the first conclusive experimental result that is at odds one of the most important and successful theories of modern physics.
The team has found that the particle, known as a W boson, is more massive than the theories predicted.
The result has been described as "shocking" by Prof David Tobak, who is the project co-spokesperson.
The discovery could lead to the development of a new, more complete theory of how the Universe works.



https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-60993523

Fixed it
 
Last edited:
Damn I accidentally posted this while trying to correct my spelling in the title


Oh well



A collider experiment has just had a mind blowing unexpected result
 
The result, published in the journal Science, could be related to hints from other experiments at Fermilab and the Large Hadron Collider at the Swiss-French border. These, as yet unconfirmed results, also suggest deviations from the Standard Model, possibly as a result of an as yet undiscovered fifth force of nature at play.
 
Last edited:
The world is going to look different," he told BBC News. "There has to be a paradigm shift. The hope is that maybe this result is going to be the one that breaks the dam.
"The famous astronomer Carl Sagan said 'extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence'. We believe we have that."
 
Last edited:
Dr Mitesh Patel of Imperial College, who works at the LHC, believes that if the Fermilab result is confirmed, it could be the first of many new results that could herald the biggest shift in our understanding of the Universe since Einstein's theories of relativity more than a hundred years ago.
"The hope is that these cracks will turn into chasms and eventually we will see some spectacular signature that not only confirms that the Standard Model has broken down as a description of nature, but also give us a new direction to help us understand what we are seeing and what the new physics theory looks like.
"If this holds, there have to be new particles and new forces to explain how to make these data consistent".
 
Last edited:
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-60993523

The measurement is the first conclusive experimental result that is at odds one of the most important and successful theories of modern physics.
The team has found that the particle, known as a W boson, is more massive than the theories predicted.
The result has been described as "shocking" by Prof David Tobak, who is the project co-spokesperson.
The discovery could lead to the development of a new, more complete theory of how the Universe works.


Finally got it to work


Sorry
 
This is so cool

Imagine being able to understand the real workings with this greater level of understanding


I’m getting old and big ones like this could be few coming

It’s sooo awesome



I was still too stoned to post yet


Wake and bake wasn’t worn off yet
 
I just hope that they don't take to calling the W boson the "Satan particle" like they did with the Higgs boson -- the "God Particle." lol
 
The result, published in the journal Science, could be related to hints from other experiments at Fermilab and the Large Hadron Collider at the Swiss-French border. These, as yet unconfirmed results, also suggest deviations from the Standard Model, possibly as a result of an as yet undiscovered fifth force of nature at play.

I don't want another force, I want everything to be distilled down to a grand unified theory! It's more elegant!

I don't think strictly speaking there are four forces. Gravity is not really a force, per se, and the weak force, which is associated with the W boson, is strictly speaking a manifestation of the electromagnetic force. I hear some physicists call it the electro- weak force. But it's just a BBC article, so it's good enough for government work :)
 
I don't want another force, I want everything to be distilled down to a grand unified theory!

I don't think strictly speaking there are four forces. Gravity is not really a force, per se, and the weak force, which is associated with the W boson, is strictly speaking a manifestation of the electromagnetic force. I hear some physicists call it the electro- weak force. But it's just a BBC article, so it's good enough for government work :)

Dont worry


It will be beautiful


The process only gets Further explained


My brain just can’t grok all the subtleties in this field

But unexpected results always lead to fascinating results
 
I just hope that they don't take to calling the W boson the "Satan particle" like they did with the Higgs boson -- the "God Particle." lol
:laugh:

W boson has been known for decades, so I doubt they'll be able to monkey with the name.

My favorite theoretical subatomic particle is the WIMP... (weakly interacting massive particle). For once, geek physicists had a sense of humor!
 
:laugh:

W boson has been known for decades, so I doubt they'll be able to monkey with the name.

My favorite theoretical subatomic particle is the WIMP... (weakly interacting massive particle). For once, geek physicists had a sense of humor!

They sure do.
 
Dont worry


It will be beautiful


The process only gets Further explained


My brain just can’t grok all the subtleties in this field

But unexpected results always lead to fascinating results

I have no idea what a heavier W boson is going to mean, but experimental results like this are always on intriguing. It seems like progress in particle physics has been painfully slow in the last few decades.
 
Back
Top