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Science

CERN Confirms Hints of Hypothetical Particle Have Disappeared (arstechnica.com) 205

John Timmer, writing for Ars Technica: Toward the end of last year, the people behind the Large Hadron Collider announced that they might have found signs of a new particle. Their evidence came from an analysis of the first high-energy data obtained after the LHC's two general-purpose detectors underwent an extensive upgrade. While the possible new particle didn't produce a signal that reached statistical significance, it did show up in both detectors, raising the hope that the LHC was finally on to some new physics. This week, those hopes have officially been dashed. Physicists used a conference to release their analysis of the flood of data that came out of this year's run. According to their data, the area of the apparent signal is filled by nothing but statistical noise. The search for new particles in data from the LHC starts with a calculation of the sorts of things we should expect to see at a given energy. The Standard Model, which describes particles and forces, can be used to make predictions of the frequency at which specific particles will pop out of collisions, as well as what those particles will decay into. So, for example, the Standard Model might indicate that two electrons should appear in five percent of the collisions that occur at a specific energy. Looking for new particles involves looking for deviations from those predictions.
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CERN Confirms Hints of Hypothetical Particle Have Disappeared

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  • they are hiding it...Sorry, just finished The Dark Forrest.
  • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Saturday August 06, 2016 @05:27PM (#52657191) Journal

    I'm not trolling - my question is sincere. If CERN never discovers new particles, does it still add value scientifically? For example, pinning down what we do know with greater precision? Or is the only value in discovering something entirely new?

    • Re:Value of CERN (Score:5, Informative)

      by pijokela ( 462279 ) on Saturday August 06, 2016 @05:33PM (#52657213)

      Well, they already did discover one new particle. The one they call the Higgs.

      If they never again find anything new with LHC, that will at least direct theoretical physicists to new directions by invalidating all the theories that rely on new particles.

    • Re:Value of CERN (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday August 06, 2016 @05:46PM (#52657299)

      To quote Wernher von Braun, it's not a failure as long as we get data.

      If the data is "nope, doesn't work", we still learned something.

      • That would be a $10-15 billion dollar "nope, doesn't work". Ouch!
        • by guruevi ( 827432 )

          CERN already worked by confirming the Higgs Boson as well as a host of other ideas. The rest is just gravy and largely highly theoretical physics just waiting to be either disproved or confirmed. Either result is good.

    • Re:Value of CERN (Score:5, Informative)

      by joe_frisch ( 1366229 ) on Saturday August 06, 2016 @05:47PM (#52657303)

      By excluding the existence of particles with certain properties, LHC eliminates some theories and that has real scientific value. In a sense the "value" of the measurements is in how different they are from theory. If LHC had NOT see a Higgs boson, that in many ways would have been more interesting than their having see one. Since the most widely accepted theories predicted a Higgs, showing that it didn't exist (within the range of expected properties) would have been very interesting. That would be similar to the Michelson Morley experiment which expected to find the "ether" but didn't.

      It turns out that LHC saw the Higgs, but so far nothing else new. Since that was expected, it is not very exciting but its still useful science.

      The great majority of science experiments find was was expected. The are good experiments, but its the few lucky ones that find a surprise that are most interesting.

      • I would disagree on one point, that it was expected to find a Higgs boson, and nothing else new. This situation makes the hierarchy problem a real and serious thing. Most theories out there expect something new to appear near the weak scale, i.e. within reach of the LHC.
        The beautiful thing about the diphoton excess which is now gone is that it was such a weakish-scale new physics signal nobody had been expecting. Alas.

        • Agreed, but do they have enough data yet to rule out super-symmetry (for example)? I'm not a particle physicist, so I don't understand how significant the limit on cross sections in this energy range is.

    • Re:Value of CERN (Score:5, Informative)

      by Pro-feet ( 2668975 ) on Saturday August 06, 2016 @06:19PM (#52657431)

      The CMS experiment which I am on - only one of the several LHC experiments - went to just this conference being mentioned with ~80 new analyses. These analyses are measurements of particle properties to a greater precision, or explorations of previously unknown territory. Many of these will later be turned into papers and add on the already >400 journal papers by our experiment. Even neglecting the Higgs boson discovery, the scientific output and acquired new knowledge from the LHC has already been immense.

      • As a sceptic about the value of CERN, my problem is that it feels like there's little of long term value likely to be found by it, compared with what the same expenditure could achieve in other scientific fields that are far less well financed. It's 'sexy' to be looking at the origins of the universe and ever more fundamental particles but...

        • Considering what money is wasted on pointless things like the iraq war ($1.1 trillion), this is just peanuts (the LHC had a budget of $9bn). Or take the rio olympics, with a budget of $9.7 billion.

          What scientific fields do deserve funding more than physics in your eyes?

          • by swb ( 14022 )

            You're assuming that somebody made the decision that a choice was made to spend the money on the Iraq war instead of science, and had the Iraq war not been fought the money would have went towards something else and that on that list of something elses, science was next on the list.

            I'd argue that the total public science spending is more zero sum in the short and near term, that over any given period of time there was only a relatively fixed amount of money to spend on science. My guess is, though, that th

        • Which is more valuable, understanding how the universe works or producing money for a business? I'd say the former.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Could've said the same about Einsteins theories and in fact the same things were said: we have a perfectly good model with Newton, this just adds more complexity for a hypothetical, at that point largely undiscovered, giant universe.

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]

      However as GPS eventually showed, you don't need space larger than our own solar system to use either theory of relativity. Within 100 years, people will laud these discoveries at CERN for their "Chinese toys" like we do Einstein for ours.

    • I'm not trolling - my question is sincere. If CERN never discovers new particles, does it still add value scientifically?

      Yes, it does. Sometimes pure research doesn't produce positive results, but that doesn't mean it doesn't produce useful information.

      If you lose your keys, and after searching your home for a couple of days you determine they definitely aren't there, have you gained anything? Yes, you have. You now have the knowledge that you need to look elsewhere.

      Sometimes that's how research works. It's guaranteed to produce results, but not necessarily the results you want.

  • #1: The Case Against Algebra [slashdot.org]

    Okay, algebra, math, CERN, tenuous but I'll give it a pass. Throw in "the case against" and "rethinking our earlier observations at CERN" and it's a definite maybe.

    #2: Bill Nye: Climate Change Denial Is 'Running Out of Steam,' Thanks To Millennials [slashdot.org]

    The "we/they were wrong" angle is much weaker here, weak fail.

    #3: Neil deGrasse Tyson Says It's 'Very Likely' The Universe Is A Simulation [slashdot.org]

    Er, no. Fail.

    #4: Utah Governor: 'Porn Is a Public Health Crisis' [slashdot.org]

    Er, other than "scientific data

    • By the way, anyone know what's up with the "sdsrc=popbyskidbtmprev" at the end of the "related suggestion" links?

      I would guess that the "sdsrc" is a key that stands for "slashdot source" and the "popbyskidbtmprev" is a code that indicates the clicked link came form the "related stories" list.

  • Have they checked the couch, really really carefully? A lot of times when I can't find something, it ends up being under one of the couch cushions. It probably fell out of their pocke when they were watching TV.

    And then sometimes when I can't find something in the house, it'll turn out I left it in the car - usually right there on the front passenger seat. Maybe they were busy bringing in groceries and forgot they had the particle in the car.

    • Have they checked the couch, really really carefully? A lot of times when I can't find something, it ends up being under one of the couch cushions. It probably fell out of their pocke when they were watching TV.

      It's possible that one of their wives stumbled across it and didn't realize it was THE dark matter they were looking for, so she threw it out or put it in a closet somewhere.

  • Right now, CERN is the only working elevator in a nearly half-century old building that was built on shaky [wikipedia.org] ground [wikipedia.org] by architects who freely acknowledge the many [wikipedia.org] failures [wikipedia.org] of [wikipedia.org] their [wikipedia.org] design. [wikipedia.org] Some of the current tenants think building a skywalk [wikipedia.org] to connect the building to the even older, more dilapidated building next door [wikipedia.org] will somehow fix both failing structures. Unfortunately for CERN, many tenants in the building are not reupping their lease at this point, and are looking for new digs elsewhere, though many acknowledge how much fun the elevator was. At some point the remaining tenants are going to realize that no matter how many stops this elevator makes, it will never leave the building, and it will never reveal anything other than empty corridors [wikipedia.org] and closed doors. [wikipedia.org]
    • you're clueless

      None of the widely acknowedged unknown questions in physics means the "ground is shaky". Just that better models and experiments to verify them are needed and that is what is being done. Even experiments to look at "unpopular alternatives" are funded and done, such as for "fifth force", quantization of space, antigravity by antimatter, etc.

      General Relativity and quantum mechanics are the two most useful models of reality we have, and various means are being explored to either unify them or

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