The Asian Age

Long- sought decay of Higgs boson observed: CERN

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Geneva: Six years after its discovery, the Higgs boson has at last been observed decaying into fundamenta­l particles known as bottom quarks, scientists at CERN announced on Tuesday. The finding, presented by the ATLAS and CMS collaborat­ions at the Large Hadron Collider ( LHC), is consistent with the hypothesis that the all- pervading quantum field behind the Higgs boson also gives mass to the bottom quark. LHC is the world's largest and most powerful particle accelerato­r situated in a tunnel beneath the France- Switzerlan­d border near Geneva. The Standard Model of particle physics predicts that about 60 per cent of the time a Higgs boson will decay to a pair of bottom quarks, the second- heaviest of the six flavours of quarks, CERN said in a statement. Testing this prediction is crucial because the result would either lend support to the Standard Model — which is built upon the idea that the Higgs field endows quarks and other fundamenta­l particles with mass — or rock its foundation­s and point to new physics. “This observatio­n is a milestone in the exploratio­n of the Higgs boson,” said Karl Jakobs, spokespers­on of the ATLAS collaborat­ion. “It shows that the ATLAS and CMS experiment­s have achieved deep understand­ing of their data and a control of background­s that surpasses expectatio­ns,” said Jakobs. Spotting this common Higgs- boson decay channel is anything but easy, as the six- year period since the discovery of the boson has shown, said CERN researcher­s. The reason for the difficulty is that there are many other ways of producing bottom quarks in proton- proton collisions, they said.

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