The Naked Scientists
Toggle navigation
Login
Register
Podcasts
The Naked Scientists
eLife
Naked Genetics
Naked Astronomy
In short
Naked Neuroscience
Ask! The Naked Scientists
Question of the Week
Archive
Video
SUBSCRIBE to our Podcasts
Articles
Science News
Features
Interviews
Answers to Science Questions
Get Naked
Donate
Do an Experiment
Science Forum
Ask a Question
About
Meet the team
Our Sponsors
Site Map
Contact us
User menu
Login
Register
Search
Home
Help
Search
Tags
Recent Topics
Login
Register
Naked Science Forum
Non Life Sciences
Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology
How will scientists recognise a Higgs Boson?
« previous
next »
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
How will scientists recognise a Higgs Boson?
1 Replies
3918 Views
0 Tags
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Penny
Guest
How will scientists recognise a Higgs Boson?
«
on:
06/09/2008 15:33:25 »
Penny asked the Naked Scientists:
How the the physicists know if they find a Higgs boson? How do they what to
look for?
What do you think?
Logged
Marked as best answer by
on
Today
at 06:43:55
rich42
Jr. Member
20
Activity:
0%
Undo Best Answer
How will scientists recognise a Higgs Boson?
«
Reply #1 on:
07/09/2008 18:56:16 »
The Higgs Boson, if it is discovered at LHC, will be identified through its decay products. It will almost certainly be unstable with a very short decay time (due to the fact that it is not seen in a stable form in nature) and the current predicted decay chain (from supersymmetry theory, which predicts the Higgs Boson in the first place) ends up with the production of 4 muons. A collision which seems to produce 4 muons alone with a total energy of above 100GeV will be a very strong candidate.
THe same is true about almost all of the high energy particles produced from this kind of collision, very few of which will survive long enough to reach the detector.
Richard
Logged
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
« previous
next »
Tags:
There was an error while thanking
Thanking...