5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
The idea that somehow elliminating mass allows FTL is beyond retarded ; Massless particles move at the speed of light, and as I pointed out before, doing such a thing breaks (or at the very least fucks with) chemistry, so everybody dies.
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It suddenly struck me that that tiny pea, pretty and blue, was the Earth. I put up my thumb and shut one eye, and my thumb blotted out the planet Earth. I didn't feel like a giant. I felt very, very small.
- NEIL ARMSTRONG, MISSION COMMANDER, APOLLO 11
Signature dedicated to the greatest achievement of mankind.
MILDLY DERANGED PHYSICIST does not mind BREAKING the SOUND BARRIER, because it is INSURED. - Simon_Jester considering the problems of hypersonic flight for Team L.A.M.E.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
I think you should be careful what layman fans have to say about a very complex topic, much less speculation on what Higgs could do.Sarevok wrote:Other ME fans. Supposedly Higgs could allow mass manipulation or some such to achieve things they did in the game.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
There are a ton of people who have read pop-science descriptions of quantum field theory and now think that they "understand" the Higgs mechanism and boson. This fuels speculation like we've seen in this thread about mass manipulation and FTL. News: You don't understand the Higgs mechanism unless you've worked through the math yourself. "Understanding" the Higgs boson (or, generally, QFT) by reading pop science and watching analogy videos online is like "reading" Shakespeare by looking at a pictographic translation.
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Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
Everything I've read about this branch of science comes with a disclaimer like 'this is a really simplified series of thought experiments and not the actual science at all'.
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Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
A lot of people don't pay attention to those disclaimers.
At some point in the 20th century, the cutting edge of physics became too complicated to explain accurately without equations. It wasn't that bad in 1900, but it's pretty much set in today.
At some point in the 20th century, the cutting edge of physics became too complicated to explain accurately without equations. It wasn't that bad in 1900, but it's pretty much set in today.
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Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
I.E. it blows upPeZook wrote:The ship disintegrates into individual particles all moving at light speed in random directions?
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Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
I thought it very ironic that the big internet bruha about this is about comic sans
http://www.cbc.ca/news/yourcommunity/20 ... -font.html
http://www.cbc.ca/news/yourcommunity/20 ... -font.html
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Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
Well even in science and engineering everyone has their own fields and can't expect to understand others to required depth. I am just an ordinary electrical engineer and I can't hope to make heads or tails out of the math particle physics researchers use. That's not what I do or studied at all (beyond just scratching the surface in a few courses).Surlethe wrote:There are a ton of people who have read pop-science descriptions of quantum field theory and now think that they "understand" the Higgs mechanism and boson. This fuels speculation like we've seen in this thread about mass manipulation and FTL. News: You don't understand the Higgs mechanism unless you've worked through the math yourself. "Understanding" the Higgs boson (or, generally, QFT) by reading pop science and watching analogy videos online is like "reading" Shakespeare by looking at a pictographic translation.
So for people who are not into particle physics work what are the practical uses of Higgs boson ? I am very curious because as you the information available to us lay people is just as typical sensational stuff. I am genuinely interested in whether all the research done has any practical implications in the future if not our own life time. This forum has people who are more into serious side of science so I figure it would be a good place to ask.
I have to tell you something everything I wrote above is a lie.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
Fabiola Gianotti (the spokesperson for ATLAS) loves her Comic Sans and will not be persuaded to change She's been doing it for many years.Spoonist wrote:I thought it very ironic that the big internet bruha about this is about comic sans
http://www.cbc.ca/news/yourcommunity/20 ... -font.html
It's fine that you don't understand it in any detail (particle physics is a pretty narrow field!) but you should be careful about looking at speculation. As an EE, you should know well the bullshit people say about any number of things within your field.Sarevok wrote:Well even in science and engineering everyone has their own fields and can't expect to understand others to required depth. I am just an ordinary electrical engineer and I can't hope to make heads or tails out of the math particle physics researchers use. That's not what I do or studied at all (beyond just scratching the surface in a few courses).
So for people who are not into particle physics work what are the practical uses of Higgs boson ? I am very curious because as you the information available to us lay people is just as typical sensational stuff. I am genuinely interested in whether all the research done has any practical implications in the future if not our own life time. This forum has people who are more into serious side of science so I figure it would be a good place to ask.
But to repeat myself: no, there are no practical implications we can see. We'll just have to wait (and it may be beyond our lifetimes).
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Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
Sort of like Hawking I'm sad they found it. Trying to explain why it didn't exist would have made physics a very interesting field for a while.
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In 1966 the Soviets find something on the dark side of the Moon. In 2104 they come back. -- Red Banner / White Star, a nBSG continuation story. Updated to Chapter 4.0 -- 14 January 2013.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
You can hope that the LHC finds hints of supersymmetry (might require full 14 TeV collisions or the SLHC luminosity upgrade).The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Sort of like Hawking I'm sad they found it. Trying to explain why it didn't exist would have made physics a very interesting field for a while.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
I'm puzzled by something, we discovered many bosons before, and have yet to master any exotic manipulation of them, why would we suddenly be able to alter mass now that we've glimpsed this boson for the first time?
It's not like we all own a photonic amplifier in every home, to change the electrical force around us conveniently.
There are no W or Z boson manipulator to change the radioactivity of stuff.
No Gluon blaster to alter atomic structures.
We just discovered a very important piece in the puzzle of the universe, it's not like we also got mastery over it and can now alter the laws of physics at will...
Think smaller, we know photon can be subtly played with to possibly create real life cloaking apparatus, just as they did for microwave, so any potential application of the discovery of the higgs will have to be of that nature to begin with.
I think we'll see small yet wondrous application way before anything remotely as fantastic as FTL. Like possibly super glue, or atom scale lithography. Then maybe one day cold fusion? Who knows, but the point is, before we get to the practical microwave oven type things, we'll have to do a lot of work.
Considering the amount of effort needed to even see the higgs, I doubt we'll see any exotic manipulation for a while, however, speculative physics should come up with interesting ways of doing so.
It's not like we all own a photonic amplifier in every home, to change the electrical force around us conveniently.
There are no W or Z boson manipulator to change the radioactivity of stuff.
No Gluon blaster to alter atomic structures.
We just discovered a very important piece in the puzzle of the universe, it's not like we also got mastery over it and can now alter the laws of physics at will...
Think smaller, we know photon can be subtly played with to possibly create real life cloaking apparatus, just as they did for microwave, so any potential application of the discovery of the higgs will have to be of that nature to begin with.
I think we'll see small yet wondrous application way before anything remotely as fantastic as FTL. Like possibly super glue, or atom scale lithography. Then maybe one day cold fusion? Who knows, but the point is, before we get to the practical microwave oven type things, we'll have to do a lot of work.
Considering the amount of effort needed to even see the higgs, I doubt we'll see any exotic manipulation for a while, however, speculative physics should come up with interesting ways of doing so.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
@ khursed, nobody is saying we can, just that it would be cool if we could.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
Yeah. Tangentially -- since Feynman actually managed to present quantum field theory without that disclaimer and I'm reading the book right now -- my initial reaction to why Feynman could get away with presenting an accurate (but heuristic) model in QED is because U(1) is a very familiar, intuitive group. Layfolk have no intuitive understanding of nonabelian bullshit like SU(2) or SU(3).Stark wrote:Everything I've read about this branch of science comes with a disclaimer like 'this is a really simplified series of thought experiments and not the actual science at all'.
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Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
Why?khursed wrote:I'm puzzled by something, we discovered many bosons before, and have yet to master any exotic manipulation of them, why would we suddenly be able to alter mass now that we've glimpsed this boson for the first time?
Considering the amount of effort needed to even see the higgs, I doubt we'll see any exotic manipulation for a while, however, speculative physics should come up with interesting ways of doing so.
Well, 75 years ago there was this guy who also was studying new particles, and, due to local marble being very cheap, noticed that the same experiment done on wooden and marble tables yelds different results.
I'll let you decide if his work influenced world today in any way and how quickly it did so despite (paraphrasing) "considering the amount of effort needed to even see the Element 94" he needed.
Tl/Dr - yes, we might not see results tomorrow, but I wouldn't exactly be so pessimistic about it.
Re: 5 Sigma [Higgs][Standard Model]
We actually don't manipulate any particle at all in engineering. All we can do is try to design an environment where certain particle reactions happen more frequently or less frequently than otherwise.khursed wrote:I'm puzzled by something, we discovered many bosons before, and have yet to master any exotic manipulation of them, why would we suddenly be able to alter mass now that we've glimpsed this boson for the first time?