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Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson.

Message-ID <645C5E11.3BF5@ix.netcom.com> (permalink)
Date 2023-05-10 20:16 -0700
From The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Organization The Starmaker Organization
Newsgroups sci.physics.relativity
Subject Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson.
References <8cc00477-211a-4e92-8b41-a2606ddffbc5n@googlegroups.com>

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Richard Hertz wrote:
> 
> Of course, the Nobel Prize was awarded anyway. 13+ billion Euros have to be
> justified, as well as more than 20 years building the CERN LHC. Now, they
> need a larger LHC to find out what such boson actually is.
> 
> Some facts:
> 
> 1) Theorized 60 years ago, the Higgs boson and the Higgs field are required to
> complete the Standard Model.
> 
> 2) Once theorized as the boson that gave MASS to every other particle, now
> it's only considered for particles more massive than electrons. Actually, the
> Higgs boson (measured as 125 times more massive than a proton) is not that
> important. What really matter is the Higgs field that the boson creates,
> because the whole universe depends on it. Particles gain mass by traveling
> through the Higgs field. It means that such field HAS TO BE everywhere.
> 
> 3) It has been CALCULATED that the decay time of the boson is 10E-22 s,
> but it CAN'T BE MEASURED. Also, there are no theories (or there are tens
> of thousand theories) about which particles emerge from such decay. It's
> believed that even "dark matter" particles can be part of the decay.
> 
> 4) The Higgs boson is the particle that gives all other fundamental particles mass, according to the standard model of particle physics. However, despite the work of thousands of researchers around the world, nobody has been able to figure out exactly how it does that or why some particles are more massive than others. It's suggested that there are MANY TYPES of Higgs
> boson, maybe one per elementary particle. It has been "observed" that
> PART OF THE DECAY are two muons, but nobody knows why.
> 
> 5) The mystery of why particles have different masses remains completely unanswered. Nevertheless, experimental results have been entirely in line with the standard model. “We have removed scenarios, but we don’t have an explanation yet,” says Blekman. “But this is what particle physics is about – we have tens of thousands of predictions, and we have to eliminate them.”
> 
> 6) "We" know that the Higgs boson HAS NO SPIN. It's the only elementary
> particle without spin. This is ESSENTIAL for the spacetime fabric of the
> universe TO BE RELATIVELY STABLE......
> 
> 7) The Higgs boson behaves as special relativity dictates.
> 
> Physicists have a massive problem as Higgs boson refuses to misbehave
> https://www.newscientist.com/article/2251285-physicists-have-a-massive-problem-as-higgs-boson-refuses-to-misbehave/
> 
> 10 years after the discovery of the Higgs boson, physicists still can't get enough of the 'God particle'
> https://www.space.com/higgs-boson-discovery-10th-anniversary
> 
> And this is what parasitic physics is: a bunch of crooks that make Einstein
> to appear as a Saint.
> 
> And they want MORE MONEY. 23 billion Euros, actually.

"Now, they
need a larger LHC to find out what such boson actually is."


They only plug the LHC in when reporters show up...

dats if they can remember where the cord is.


"Where do you plug it in????"







-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
 to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable,
and challenge
 the unchallengeable.

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Thread

11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2023-05-10 19:45 -0700
  Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2023-05-10 20:16 -0700
    Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2023-05-11 06:21 -0700
      Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2023-05-11 06:55 -0700
      Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2023-05-11 15:08 -0700
        Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. whodat <whodaat@void.nowgre.com> - 2023-05-11 17:21 -0500
          Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Domingo Vassilopulos <gdag@iipmugao.op> - 2023-05-11 22:25 +0000
            Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. whodat <whodaat@void.nowgre.com> - 2023-05-11 17:37 -0500
              Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Domingo Vassilopulos <gdag@iipmugao.op> - 2023-05-11 23:02 +0000
                Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. whodat <whodaat@void.nowgre.com> - 2023-05-11 19:37 -0500
          Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2023-05-11 18:07 -0700
            Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. whodat <whodaat@void.nowgre.com> - 2023-05-11 20:27 -0500
              Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2023-05-11 19:39 -0700
            Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the  Higgs Boson. The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2023-05-11 21:33 -0700
            Re: 11 years after its "discovery", physicists don't know what is the Higgs Boson. Domingo Vassilopulos <gdag@iipmugao.op> - 2023-05-12 12:23 +0000

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