The Boston Globe

Peter Higgs, 94, physicist who proposed existence of Higgs boson particle

- By Dennis Overbye

Peter Higgs, who predicted the existence of a new particle that came to be named after him (as well as God) and sparked a half-century, worldwide, billiondol­lar search for it culminatin­g in Champagne in 2012 and a Nobel Prize a year later, died Monday at home in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was 94.

The cause was a blood disorder, said Alan Walker, his close friend and fellow physicist at the University of Edinburgh, where Dr. Higgs was an emeritus professor.

Dr. Higgs was a 35-year-old assistant professor at the university in 1964 when he suggested the existence of a new particle that would explain how other particles acquire mass. The Higgs boson, also known as “the God particle,” would become the keystone of a suite of theories known as the Standard Model, which encapsulat­ed all human knowledge so far about elementary particles and the forces by which they shaped nature and the universe.

Dr. Higgs was a modest man who eschewed the trappings of fame and preferred the outdoors. He didn’t own a television or use email or a cellphone. For years he relied on Walker to act as his “digital seeing-eye dog,” in the words of a former student.

A half-century later, on July 4, 2012, he received a standing ovation as he walked into a lecture hall at the European Organizati­on for Nuclear Research, or CERN, in Geneva and heard that his particle had finally been found. On a webcast from the laboratory, the whole world watched him pull out a handkerchi­ef and wipe away a tear.

“It’s really an incredible thing that it’s happened in my lifetime,” he said on the webcast.

Declining to stick around for the after-parties, Dr. Higgs flew right back home, celebratin­g on the plane with a can of London Pride beer. CERN, which has shelves of empty Champagne bottles commemorat­ing great moments lining its control room, asked if it could have the can, but Dr. Higgs had already thrown it away.

Peter Ware Higgs was born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, in May 29, 1929, the son of a BBC sound engineer, Thomas Ware Higgs, and Gertrude Maude (Coghill) Higgs, who managed the household. He grew up in Bristol.

His interest in physics was tweaked when he was attending the same school, Cotham Grammar School, as had Paul Dirac, the great British theorist who was one of the fathers (there were no mothers) of quantum mechanics. That theory, which describes the forces of nature as a game of catch between forcecarry­ing bits of energy called bosons, would be the same field in which Dr. Higgs would rise to fame.

At the age of 17, Dr. Higgs moved to City of London School, where he studied mathematic­s. A year later, he entered King’s College London, graduating in 1947 with a bachelor’s degree in physics. He went on to earn his doctorate in 1954 for research on molecules and heat.

After temporary research posts at the University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London, and University College London, he took a permanent job as a lecturer at Edinburgh in 1960. Dr. Higgs had come to love the city during his college days when he used to escape on hitchhikin­g trips to the Scottish Highlands.

During those years he also became active politicall­y in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmamen­t and Greenpeace. But he dropped out of both when they grew too radical for his taste.

It was in the disarmamen­t movement that he met and fell in love with a fellow activist, Jody Williamson. They married in 1963. She died in 2008. Dr. Higgs is survived by their two sons, Christophe­r, a computer scientist, and Jonathan, a musician; and two grandchild­ren.

At Edinburgh, Dr. Higgs redirected his research from chemistry and molecules to his first love, elementary particles.

Edinburgh was the birthplace of James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879), who had accomplish­ed the first great unificatio­n of physics, showing that electricit­y and magnetism were different manifestat­ions of the same force, electromag­netism, which constitute­s light. It would be Dr. Higgs’s fate to push physics to the next step, toward a theory that could be written on a T-shirt, by helping to show that Maxwell’s electromag­netism and the so-called weak force that governs radioactiv­ity are different faces of the same thing.

As is often the case in the zigzag progress of science, however, that was not what Dr. Higgs thought he was doing.

“At the time,” he recalled in an interview in Edinburgh in 2014, “the thought was to solve the strong force.”

The strong force holds atomic nuclei together. According to theory, the particles that carry that force — bosons — should be massless, like the photon that transmits light. But while light crosses the universe, the strong force barely reaches across an atomic nucleus, which, by quantum rules, meant that the particle carrying it should be almost as massive as a whole proton.

So how did the carriers of the strong force become so massive?

Adapting an idea that Philip W. Anderson of Princeton had used to help explain supercondu­ctivity, Dr. Higgs suggested that space was filled with an invisible field of energy, a cosmic molasses. The field would act on some particles trying to move through it like an entourage attaching itself to a celebrity trying to make it to the bar, imbuing them with what we perceive as mass. Call it spooky action everywhere.

In some situations, he noted, a bit of this field could flake off and appear as a new particle.

His first paper on the subject was rejected, however, so he rewrote it, “spicing it up,” as he put it, with a new paragraph at the end emphasizin­g the prediction of the new particle, which would come to be called the Higgs boson.

It turned out that François Englert and Robert Brout, of the Universite Libre de Bruxelles, had beaten him into print by seven weeks with a similar idea. Shortly thereafter three more physicists — Tom Kibble, of Imperial College London; Carl Hagen, of the University of Rochester; and Gerald Guralnik, of Brown University — chimed in.

“They were first, but I didn’t know until Nambu told me,” Dr. Higgs said in an interview, referring to Nachiro Nambu, a University of Chicago physicist and also a Nobel laureate, who edited the journal. There was no internet then, he said, his voice trailing off, implying that if he had seen their paper he would probably never have written his own.

“At the beginning I wasn’t sure it would be important,” Dr. Higgs went on. Neither did anybody else.

In fact, theories of the strong force, which Dr. Higgs had set out to study, subsequent­ly went another way. But his paper and his particle would be decisive for the so-called weak force.

Unknown to Dr. Higgs, American physicist Sheldon Glashow had proposed a theory in 1961 that unified the weak force and electromag­netic forces, but it had the same problem of how to explain why the carriers of the weak part of the “electrowea­k force” weren’t massless.

The boson became a big deal in 1967 when Steven Weinberg, of the University of Texas at Austin, made it the linchpin in unifying the weak and electromag­netic forces. It became an even bigger deal in 1971, when Dutch theorist Gerardus ’t Hooft proved that the whole scheme made mathematic­al sense.

Dr. Higgs said Benjamin Lee, a Fermilab physicist who later died in a car crash, christened it the Higgs boson during a conference in about 1972, perhaps because Dr. Higgs’ paper was cited first in Weinberg’s paper.

The name stuck, not just to the particle, but to the molasses field that produced it and the mechanism by which that field gave mass to other particles — somewhat to the embarrassm­ent of Dr. Higgs and the annoyance of the other theorists.

Dr. Higgs continued to teach until he retired in 1996, but his lack of research kept him out of the fray and the fury that has resulted from the discovery of his boson. In 1999, he turned down an offer of knighthood, but in 2012 he was named a Companion of Honor by Queen Elizabeth II.

The next year he joined his idols Dirac and Maxwell in immortalit­y by way of the Nobel Prize in physics, which he shared with Englert. But being in the fray was never his thing. On the day the physics prize was supposed to be announced, he decided that it would be a good time to leave town.

Unfortunat­ely, his car wasn’t working. Stuck in town, he decided to go to lunch. But on the way a neighbor intercepte­d him and told him he had won the prize.

“What prize?” he joked.

 ?? PETER MACDIARMID/GETTY IMAGES ?? Dr. Higgs, pictured in 2013, was a 35-year-old assistant professor in 1964 when he suggested the existence of a new particle.
PETER MACDIARMID/GETTY IMAGES Dr. Higgs, pictured in 2013, was a 35-year-old assistant professor in 1964 when he suggested the existence of a new particle.

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