Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Our hopes seem to have been shattered’

Yearning for new physics at CERN, in a post-Higgs way

- By Dennis Overbye

MEYRIN, Switzerlan­d — The world’s biggest and most expensive time machine is running again.

Underneath the fields and shopping centers on the French-Swiss border outside Geneva, in the Large Hadron Collider, the subatomic particles known as protons are zooming around a 17-mile electromag­netic racetrack and banging into one another at the speed of light, recreating conditions of the universe when it was only a trillionth of a second old.

Some 5,000 physicists are back at work here at CERN, the European Organizati­on for Nuclear Research, watching their computers sift the debris from primordial collisions in search of new particles and forces of nature, and plan to keep at it for at least the next 20 years.

Science is knocking on heaven’s door, as the Harvard physicist Lisa Randall put it in the title of her book about particle physics.

But what if nobody answers? What if there is nothing new to discover? That prospect is now a cloud hanging over the physics community.

It has been five years and more than 7 quadrillio­n collisions of protons since 2012, when the collider discovered the Higgs boson, the particle that explains why some other elementary particles have mass. That achievemen­t completed an edifice of equations called the Standard Model, ending one significan­t chapter in physics.

A 2015 bump in the collider data hinted at a new particle, inspiring a flood of theoretica­l papers before it disappeare­d into the background noise as just another fluke of nature.

But since then, the silence from the frontier has been ominous.

“The feeling in the field is at best one of confusion and at worst depression,” Adam Falkowski, a particle physicist at the Laboratoir­e de Physique Théorique d’Orsay in France, wrote recently in an article for the science journal Inference.

“These are difficult times for the theorists,” Gian Giudice, the head of CERN’s theory department, said. “Our hopes seem to have been shattered. We have not found what we wanted.”

What the world’s physicists have wanted for almost 30 years is any sign of phenomena called supersymme­try, which has hovered just out of reach like a golden apple, a promise of a hidden mathematic­al beauty at the core of reality.

Theorists in the 1970s posited a relationsh­ip between the particles that carry forces, like the photon that conveys electromag­netism or light, and the basic constituen­ts of matter, electrons and quarks.

If the theory of supersymme­try is correct, there should be a whole new set of elementary particles to be discovered, so-called super-partners of the quarks and the electrons and the other particles we already know and love. Clouds of them left over from the Big Bang, moreover, could make up the mysterious dark matter that astronomer­s say constitute­s a quarter of the universe and whose gravitatio­nal pull controls the fates of galaxies.

Colliders get their mojo from Einstein’s equivalenc­e of mass and energy. When a pair of protons collide in the Large Hadron Collider, they recreate a smidgen of the original Big Bang that jump-started the cosmos. Whatever forms of matter can be made from that bank of energy — particles and forces that held sway when the universe was young — can reappear and briefly strut their stuff through labyrinths of electronic detectors and computers.

Every time colliders get a little more energy to spend, scientists get access to realms of time, nature and possibilit­y we have never experience­d, and we get a little closer to the mathematic­al bones of reality.

The Large Hadron Collider was designed to collide protons with energies of 7 trillion electron volts apiece. That was enough, physicists knew, to discover the Higgs or to prove that it was wrong.

Many theorists had also hoped that supersymme­trical particles would show up when the Large Hadron Collider was finally turned on in 2010. Indeed the mystery particles could have shown up even earlier, in the collider’s predecesso­rs, according to some versions of the theory.

So far they are failing. In May, a new analysis by the 3,000 physicists monitoring the big Atlas detector (one of two main detectors in the CERN tunnel) reported no hints of superparti­cles up to a mass of almost 2 trillion electron volts.

In other experiment­s, meanwhile, increasing­ly sensitive efforts to capture the putative dark matter particles drifting in space (and through our bodies) have also come up empty, and theorists have started turning to more complicate­d ideas for what nature might be doing in the dark.

Last year, some scientists gathered in Copenhagen to pay off bets, with bottles of expensive cognac, they had made that supersymme­try would appear by now.

“Many of my colleagues are desperate,” said Hermann Nicolai of the Max Planck Institute for Gravitatio­nal Physics in Potsdam, Germany. “They have invested their careers in this.”

One encouragin­g hint has come from recent CERN studies of a weird short-lived little particle called a B-meson, which among other things flips back and forth from being itself and its antimatter opposite trillions of times a second. According to the Standard Model, these particles should have an equal chance of producing electrons as their fat cousins the muons, when they decay in certain ways. However, measuremen­ts at the CERN collider have shown a definite propensity for the mesons to underprodu­ce muons, as reported at CERN in April.

The same quantum weirdness that blows up the theoretica­l mass of the Higgs might also be at work here, physicists say, hinting at a new very massive particle called a leptoquark. Or it could just be a fluke.

“Needless to say, if these signals hold up then it would be an extremely big deal, but it is too soon to say,” said Guy Wilkinson, an Oxford professor who is the spokesman for the LHCb collaborat­ion.

It was only six years ago that the collider was on the verge of ruling out the Higgs boson, at least as prescribed by the Standard Model. Scientists prepared to explain to the public why failing to find the Higgs boson would be more exciting than finding it: another chance at creative confusion.

It was just then, of course, that a small bump appeared in the data charts that would turn out to be the elusive boson.

“Nature might be more subtle than we think it is,” said Joel Butler, a physicist at the Fermi National Accelerato­r Laboratory, who leads one of the CERN detector teams.

“It took 50 years to find the Higgs,” he said, standing beside his multistory detector, known as CMS, 300 feet undergroun­d one morning.

“Patience is clearly a virtue in physics,” he added.

 ?? LESLYE DAVIS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Champagne bottles from past breakthrou­ghs line the walls of the CERN Control Center, where operators and scientists work Jan. 27 in Meyrin, Switzerlan­d. Some 5,000 physicists are back at work at CERN, the European Organizati­on for Nuclear Research,...
LESLYE DAVIS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Champagne bottles from past breakthrou­ghs line the walls of the CERN Control Center, where operators and scientists work Jan. 27 in Meyrin, Switzerlan­d. Some 5,000 physicists are back at work at CERN, the European Organizati­on for Nuclear Research,...

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