What is the God particle?
What is the God particle?
- Recently we get to know about the news regarding nuclear physics... GOD PARTICLE.. This article gives a brief detail about what is it...
- The "God particle" is the nickname of a subatomic
particle called the Higgs boson. In layman’s terms, different subatomic
particles are responsible for giving matter different properties. One of the
most mysterious and important properties is mass. Some particles, like protons
and neutrons, have mass. Others, like photons, do not. The Higgs boson, or “God
particle,” is believed to be the particle which gives mass to matter. The “God
particle” nickname grew out of the long, drawn-out struggles of physicists to
find this elusive piece of the cosmic puzzle. What follows is a very brief,
very simplified explanation of how the Higgs boson fits into modern physics,
and how science is attempting to study it.
- The “standard model” of particle physics is a
system that attempts to describe the forces, components, and reactions of the
basic particles that make up matter. It not only deals with atoms and their
components, but the pieces that compose some subatomic particles. This model
does have some major gaps, including gravity, and some experimental
contradictions. The standard model is still a very good method of understanding
particle physics, and it continues to improve. The model predicts that there
are certain elementary particles even smaller than protons and neutrons. As of
the date of this writing, the only particle predicted by the model which has
not been experimentally verified is the “Higgs boson,” jokingly referred to as
the “God particle.”
- Each of the subatomic particles contributes to the
forces that cause all matter interactions. One of the most important, but least
understood, aspects of matter is mass. Science is not entirely sure why some
particles seem mass-less, like photons, and others are “massive.” The standard
model predicts that there is an elementary particle, the Higgs boson, which
would produce the effect of mass. Confirmation of the Higgs boson would be a
major milestone in our understanding of physics.
- The “God particle” nickname actually arose when
the book The God Particle: If the
Universe Is the Answer, What Is the Question? by Leon Lederman was published. Since
then, it’s taken on a life of its own, in part because of the monumental
questions about matter that the God particle might be able to answer. The man
who first proposed the Higgs boson’s existence, Peter Higgs, isn’t all that
amused by the nickname “God particle,” as he’s an avowed atheist. All the same,
there isn’t really any religious intention behind the nickname.
- Currently, efforts are under way to confirm the
Higgs boson using the Large Hadron Collider, a particle accelerator in
Switzerland, which should be able to confirm or refute the existence of the God
particle. As with any scientific discovery, God’s amazing creation becomes more
and more impressive as we learn more about it. Either result—that the Higgs
boson exists, or does not exist—represents a step forward in human knowledge
and another step forward in our appreciation of God’s awe-inspiring universe.
Whether or not there is a “God particle,” we know this about Christ: “For by
him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and
invisible . . . all things were created by him and for him” (Colossians 1:16).
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