CERN's atom smasher, the $10 billion Large
Hadron Collider on the Swiss-French border, has been creating high-energy
collisions of protons to investigate dark matter, antimatter and the creation of
the universe, which many theorize occurred in a massive explosion known as the
Big Bang.
The phrase " God particle,"
coined by Nobel Prize-winning physicist Leon Lederman, is used by laymen, not
physicists, more as an explanation for how the subatomic universe works than how
it all started.
Though an impenetrable concept to many, the Higgs boson has
until now been just that - a concept intended to explain a riddle: How were
subatomic particles, such as electrons, protons and neutrons, themselves formed?
What gives them their mass?
The answer came in a theory first proposed by
Scottish physicist Peter Higgs and others in the 1960s. It envisioned an energy
field where particles interact with a key particle, the Higgs boson.
The
idea is that other particles attract Higgs bosons and the more they attract, the
bigger their mass will be. Some liken the effect to a ubiquitous Higgs snowfield
that affects other particles traveling through it depending on whether they are
wearing, metaphorically speaking, skis, snowshoes or just shoes.
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