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Brookhaven Lab and the Search for the Higgs

Category: LHC
Posted on: December 13, 2011 3:46 PM, by Karen McNulty Walsh

This guest post was written by Brookhaven Lab physicist Kostas Nikolopoulos.

LHC-350px.jpg


The ATLAS detector at the LHC

Today's public seminar at CERN, where the ATLAS and CMS collaborations presented the preliminary results of their searches for the Standard Model (SM) Higgs boson with the full dataset collected during 2011, is a landmark for high-energy physics!

The Higgs boson is a still-hypothetical particle postulated in the mid-1960s to complete what is considered the SM of particle interactions. Its role within the SM is to provide other particles with mass. Specifically, the mass of elementary particles is the result of their interaction with the Higgs field. The Higgs boson's properties are defined in the SM, apart from its mass, which is a free parameter of the theory.

Scientists are looking for signs of the Higgs boson by searching for the products of its decay. Two of the most prominent decay channels, or ways the Higgs can decay, are to form two photons or to form a pair of Z bosons, each of which subsequently decays to a pair of leptons (electrons or muons). Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) has played and continues to play a key role in the design, construction, and operation of the detectors of the ATLAS experiment that are used to observe electrons and photons (the liquid argon electromagnetic calorimeter) and muons (the muon spectrometer). Major contributions are also made in the data analysis, where Brookhaven scientists have leading roles. BNL also significantly contributes to the trigger -- deciding which events to analyze in detail -- and to computing.

Owing to the excellent performance of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the stable operation of the ATLAS and CMS detectors, the two collaborations have achieved a five-fold increase of the dataset presented during the summer conferences, only a few months ago. The new result excludes the vast majority of the range where the Higgs boson mass could potentially lie, and leaves very little hiding space for the elusive boson.

Furthermore, both experiments observed in several channels an intriguing upward fluctuation of the data. Is this the first glimpse of the Higgs boson or just a statistical fluctuation? Only improved analysis, and more data will tell!

Scientists at the LHC look eagerly forward to next year's LHC run period starting in early spring 2012. If the LHC performance projections work out as expected -- and the LHC crew has been very good in keeping promises -- we should be able to double the available dataset in time for the summer conferences and have a conclusion on the existence or not of the last missing piece of the Standard Model of particle physics.

For more on the story, see the US LHC press release issued jointly by Brookhaven Lab and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.

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Comments

1

It's exciting news, but maybe also a justification for this hugely expensive CERN project (how many billion did it cost?). I've read the main popular science book about the Higgs boson (http://popsciencebooks.com/physics-2/massive-the-missing-particle-that-sparked-the-greatest-hunt-in-science) and will still follow the news in the coming months to see if they have finally found this elusive particle (or not).

Posted by: Sara Maines | December 13, 2011 4:18 PM

2

The U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation contributed $551M toward the construction of the LHC and the detectors searching for the Higgs, and about $100M/year toward maintenance and operation of the detectors, computing, and R&D. This investment in basic research pays dividends by broadening our understanding of the universe in which we live -- imparting the kind of knowledge that satisfies our innate curiosity about how the world works, and that history has shown advances our ability to develop new technologies. Think back to the discovery of the electron in the early 1900s: No one knew what it would be good for; now our whole economy depends on moving electrons through circuits in our gadgets and our homes.

Posted by: Karen McNulty Walsh Author Profile Page | December 14, 2011 11:40 AM

3

This is outstanding lab and its works gone awesome day by day there research on higgs is unexplainable because i don't get enough knowledge on it but it is cool

Posted by: norgesautomaten | December 16, 2011 1:58 AM

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