blasphemer
That's a compliment among my circles.
Ok now I feel dumb, I followed the development of the higgs boson research lightly, but now reading more carefully the discovery is based on its weight (among other things), which makes me wonder, doesn't weight implies mass? I know they are not the same, but this is the particle that gives "mass", and was discovered by its "weight", do the other particles have weight? if so then why scientist were compelled to find a particle that gives mass, wouldn't the electrons, protons, etc be giving stuff "mass" already?
and now I don't know if that was clear...
The Higgs Boson is produced by the Higgs Field. This field is what gives particles mass.
IIRC Gravitons are already predicted by the Standard Model, they're the mediating particle for the force of gravitation
Most subatomic particles don't have mass, some of them do, if you add up and "do the math", it actually doesn't add up, something else is giving stuff mass because the mass of protons, neutrons etc is tiny and almost irrelevant.
Also don't think of this idea as some lightspeed ME weapon. The fastest speed reached for a projectile with conventional methods is 10 miles per second. Suppose you could double that speed or at least keep the speed consistent without much deceleration and keep it relative small like a cruise missle the military would be all over it. Even if it would have a terrible energy use/blow shit up ratio because such a weapon would allow extremely precise artilery strikes and such, perhaps even from space.
Does anyone know what kind of advances in technology this can lead to? I've been following this thing pretty closely for a few years now, but I've never understood what kind of tangible benefits it could produce someday. Are we talking about stuff like anti gravity or something?
Well, what are some of those ideas? Do you have any good links? I'm really curious, even if it doesn't pan out.Nobody knows. There are plenty of ideas of where it can lead, but you aren't going to find out about anything for a while.
As Dr Neil Tyson puts it in this video, the time when the world revolved about discoveries and progress made in America (either by Americans or foreign students or workers) has long gone.
So I went from this video to an interview of Tyson by Stephen Colbert, and I found his wonderfully poignant retort to all the "what good is it" folks in this thread:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXh9RQCvxmg&feature=player_detailpage#t=2860s
Well, what are some of those ideas? Do you have any good links? I'm really curious, even if it doesn't pan out.
So I went from this video to an interview of Tyson by Stephen Colbert, and I found his wonderfully poignant retort to all the "what good is it" folks in this thread:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXh9RQCvxmg&feature=player_detailpage#t=2860s
I stumbled on this local news broadcast about it, while channel surfing, that made me laugh. Skip to 1:30 -
http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/video/7465645-scientists-find-evidence-of-elusive-god-particle/
I saw this analogy this morning to the Higgs field and am wondering how 'accurate' it is, because I still don't really understand:
Without the Higgs field, since all particles are actually very light, they shouldn't have as much mass as they do, but the Higgs field acts kind of like friction and makes them seem heavier. It's like trying to move a piece of furniture across a hardwood floor--it's really easy because your couch isn't actually all that heavy. However, the Higgs field essentially covers your floor with carpet, making the couch feel a lot heavier and more difficult to push.
I saw this analogy this morning to the Higgs field and am wondering how 'accurate' it is, because I still don't really understand:
Without the Higgs field, since all particles are actually very light, they shouldn't have as much mass as they do, but the Higgs field acts kind of like friction and makes them seem heavier. It's like trying to move a piece of furniture across a hardwood floor--it's really easy because your couch isn't actually all that heavy. However, the Higgs field essentially covers your floor with carpet, making the couch feel a lot heavier and more difficult to push.
So following that analogy and taking some liberty with the term "god particle", one could say that Jesus laid or even installed the foundation of the universe.
I watched two videos today which helped me understand it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIg1Vh7uPyw&feature=player_embedded
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/video/2012/jul/03/what-is-a-higgs-boson-video
I think you are under the impression that if the Higgs field wasn't there, these particles would still have some mass. I don't think that is correct. If the Higgs field wasn't there, the particles would have any mass at all and would travel at light speed. At least, that is how I understand it from the videos. Correct me if I'm wrong.
There are more videos here: http://www.theverge.com/2012/7/5/3138469/what-is-higgs-boson-videos
so was this supposed to disprove God or something?