Toronto Star

‘Endgame’ near on Big Bang theory

Physicists find signs of Higgs boson that’s key to forming stars, planets

- ROBERT EVANS REUTERS NEWS AGENCY

GENEVA— Physicists investigat­ing the makeup of the universe said on Wednesday they were closing in on the long-sought but elusive Higgs boson they believe was key to turning debris from the Big Bang into stars, planets and finally life.

The researcher­s spoke after the U.S. Fermilab laboratory reported that it had spotted likely signs of the particle. The European Organizati­on for Nuclear Research (CERN) saw similar signals late last year.

“The endgame is approachin­g in the hunt for the Higgs boson,” said Jim Siegrist, associate director for High Energy Physics at the Department of Energy, which oversees Fermilab operations.

“It seems we are getting closer and closer,” said Oliver Buechmuell­er of CERN’S CMS experiment. “This summer is going to be very hot.”

But the scientists insisted it was much too early to claim a formal discovery, which would fill in the last major gap in the so-called Standard Model of particle physics, which has underpinne­d science’s view of the cosmos for 40 years.

The existence of the boson, and its linked particle field, was posited in 1964 by Briton Peter Higgs, who argued a mechanism must exist that turned matter into mass after the primeval explosion that created the universe 13.7 billion years ago. The search only began in earnest in the 1980s, first in Fermilab’s Tevatron particle collider and later in a similar machine at CERN, but most intensivel­y since 2010 with the start-up of the European centre’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC). In December last year, after only 18 months of operations, CMS and its LHC sister research team ATLAS reported “tantalizin­g glimpses” of what could well be the Higgs in the product of tens of millions of particle collisions in the collider. The collisions, at a tiny fraction under the speed of light, recreate in miniature the type of events that occurred immediatel­y after the Big Bang, all monitored and recorded by computers. The latest turn in the Higgs saga came at an annual scientific gathering, the Moriond Conference, in the Italian Alpine ski resort of La Thuile with scientists from the Tevatron coming up with near-final measuremen­ts. These, emerging from study of the recordings of the final collisions in the Tevatron before it was closed down last September, showed Higgs-like phenomena in the same energy range as the LHC, 115 to 130 Giga electron-volts (GEV). Italian researcher and blogger Tomasso Dorigo, who works with both CERN and Fermilab, said the independen­t but similar results from differing experiment­s “does raise the odds to which I am willing to bet that the Higgs is there.”

 ?? FABRICE COFFRINI/AP FILE PHOTO ?? Scientists at the European Organizati­on for Nuclear Research (CERN) narrowed the area where the Higgs boson could be found.
FABRICE COFFRINI/AP FILE PHOTO Scientists at the European Organizati­on for Nuclear Research (CERN) narrowed the area where the Higgs boson could be found.

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