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Socoder -> Off Topic -> Higgs Boson found?

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Wed, 04 Jul 2012, 08:43
steve_ancell
Now waiting for the crusties to start all the bollocks about the universe being sucked inside-out and stuff.
Wed, 04 Jul 2012, 08:43
steve_ancell
Scientists say they have now found a particle that is consistent to the Higgs Boson. Linkage
Fri, 06 Jul 2012, 00:04
9572AD
My one concern was the very real possibility of a stable micro-singularity forming, drifting to the center of the earth (gravity) and then growing until it suddenly devours the planet.
Something which may have happened but we won't know until we're doomed.

Anyhow, yay Higgs. We have confirmed what we were already pretty sure we knew for decades. Whoo-pee.

-=-=-
All the raw, animal magnetism of a rutabaga.
Fri, 06 Jul 2012, 02:23
rockford
Now waiting for the crusties to start all the bollocks about the universe being sucked inside-out and stuff.

Slurp. Burp. Pop!
Fri, 06 Jul 2012, 03:59
Retro
I wasn't even aware that Higgs had lost his boson.
Fri, 06 Jul 2012, 05:17
steve_ancell
LOL
Fri, 06 Jul 2012, 16:07
Stealth
This discovery could revolutionize science if it turns out to be a legitimate find. The Higgs Boson is the biggest mystery in particle physics.

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Quit posting and try Google.
Sat, 07 Jul 2012, 21:12
9572AD
Sorry, but finding the Higgs boson does nothing but confirm the scientific model we've been using for decades. It's not even an evolution, much less a revolution.

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All the raw, animal magnetism of a rutabaga.
Sat, 07 Jul 2012, 23:08
Dabz
The point of finding it is that it was predicted in the Standard Model, if, they didn't, the Standard Model would've then been turned on its head and it would've been back to the drawing board.

Though, they still technically dont know if it the Higgs that they are looking for! So, yeah, it's a discovery, because there is something there, but as of yet, it still might be something else!

Dabz

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Intel Core i5 6400 2.7GHz, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 (8GB), 8Gig DDR4 RAM, 256GB SSD, 1TB HDD, Windows 10 64bit
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 03:40
steve_ancell
Yeah I know that but it's still enough to scare the hippies and crusties into thinking that the earth will be sucked inside-out. LMAO!
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 03:44
steve_ancell
First there was Roswell that is still making stackloads of cash from tourists, now I'm waiting for some crusty to claim that he has found a location where stuff keeps disappearing into the void, perhaps they will name the location Suckville or something.
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 05:01
shroom_monk
Yeah, basically what Dabz said: it's exciting because it proves (more or less) the Standard Model we've been using for decades. We can't just use predictions like the SM without first having good evidence for them, because widely accepted scientific theories have many times shown to be completely wrong by experiment (e.g. plum pudding model of the atom).

Now that we're pretty sure the Higgs Boson exists, it opens up the way for all kinds of as-yet unknown science!

-=-=-
A mushroom a day keeps the doctor away...

Keep It Simple, Shroom!
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 09:42
9572AD
I'd call finding every predicted particle aside from the Higgs pretty much from the off and the rest relatively short order pretty good evidence and am fairly certain scientists have been using the Standard Model to make predictions for a good long time already.

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All the raw, animal magnetism of a rutabaga.
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 10:33
shroom_monk
But that's not how science works. You can't just assume that because nothing has contradicted your theory yet means that it must be true!

-=-=-
A mushroom a day keeps the doctor away...

Keep It Simple, Shroom!
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 12:20
steve_ancell
shroom_monk Now that we're pretty sure the Higgs Boson exists, it opens up the way for all kinds of as-yet unknown science!


I WANT MY HOVERBOARD THAT I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR SINCE 2000, THEY PREDICTED THEM IN THE LATE 1970S. LMARO!
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 15:44
9572AD
No, that's pretty much exactly how science works. You take your best guess and you build on it until you get contradictory results. There is no such thing as an absolute fact in science, only things that have not been wrong yet.

-=-=-
All the raw, animal magnetism of a rutabaga.
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 17:42
steve_ancell
From what I can tell, being a physicist must be one hell of an interesting job to be able to lure Brian Cox away from bashing drums to smashing atoms.
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 19:14
shroom_monk
9572AD You take your best guess and you build on it until you get contradictory results. There is no such thing as an absolute fact in science, only things that have not been wrong yet.

Exactly. You take a guess and test it. You can't just assume it to be right until you've tested it, which is why this result is so important.

-=-=-
A mushroom a day keeps the doctor away...

Keep It Simple, Shroom!
Sun, 08 Jul 2012, 21:17
9572AD
You don't have to know for certain it exists before you can test whether things behave as though it exists or not.

-=-=-
All the raw, animal magnetism of a rutabaga.
Mon, 09 Jul 2012, 00:30
shroom_monk
To check that things behave as though it exists is to check if it exists though... It is true that you can make predictions based on a hypothesis to see if they fit, but sooner or later you have to actually find some evidence for that hypothesis, which is what this experiment has done. It's certainly not pointless.

-=-=-
A mushroom a day keeps the doctor away...

Keep It Simple, Shroom!
Mon, 09 Jul 2012, 01:30
steve_ancell
9572AD You don't have to know for certain it exists before you can test whether things behave as though it exists or not.

You're right there, I'm pretty certain that I remember reading somewhere that the atom was discovered without actually seeing it.
Mon, 09 Jul 2012, 12:06
shroom_monk
Eyesight isn't the only way to observe things though. They observed it when determining its true nature, but they couldn't see it.

-=-=-
A mushroom a day keeps the doctor away...

Keep It Simple, Shroom!
Mon, 09 Jul 2012, 12:09
steve_ancell
That is sort of what I remember reading, something about measuring it's effects on it surroundings came into it somewhere.
Mon, 09 Jul 2012, 13:25
shroom_monk
They used to think that atoms were a ball of mass, like a plum pudding, but then they fired some particles at thin sheets of foil to watch how they scattered, and they scattered completely differently to how they expected they would.

-=-=-
A mushroom a day keeps the doctor away...

Keep It Simple, Shroom!
Mon, 09 Jul 2012, 19:41
9572AD
...And then they stopped using the plum-pudding model and thought up a new model...presumably.
The difference being, in the case of the Higgs, that they were right all along so *nothing has changed*

-=-=-
All the raw, animal magnetism of a rutabaga.
Mon, 09 Jul 2012, 20:06
steve_ancell
9572AD *nothing has changed*

Of course it has, it's paved the way for crusties and hippies to talk a load more crap.
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