The Higgs Boson Explained
Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 16 Ιουλ 2012
On
Friday July 13 at noon, faculty and other members of the Physics
Department helped the campus community understand the significance of
discovering the Higgs Boson, the particle that was predicted by Peter
Higgs almost 50 years ago. Mark Richards, Executive Dean of the College
of Letters & Sciences, will host this discussion for the Berkeley
community.
Professors Beate Heinemann, an experimental physicist and a
member of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC in CERN, Switzerland, and
Lawrence Hall, a theoretical physicist and former Director of the
Berkeley Center for Theoretical Physics, explained what the Higgs is,
why it was predicted and how it was proven to exist. They were joined by
panel members Professor Marjorie Shapiro, also a member of the Atlas
experiment, Miller Fellow Josh Ruderman and PhD student and ATLAS member
Louise Skinnari.
Friday July 13 at noon, faculty and other members of the Physics
Department helped the campus community understand the significance of
discovering the Higgs Boson, the particle that was predicted by Peter
Higgs almost 50 years ago. Mark Richards, Executive Dean of the College
of Letters & Sciences, will host this discussion for the Berkeley
community.
Professors Beate Heinemann, an experimental physicist and a
member of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC in CERN, Switzerland, and
Lawrence Hall, a theoretical physicist and former Director of the
Berkeley Center for Theoretical Physics, explained what the Higgs is,
why it was predicted and how it was proven to exist. They were joined by
panel members Professor Marjorie Shapiro, also a member of the Atlas
experiment, Miller Fellow Josh Ruderman and PhD student and ATLAS member
Louise Skinnari.
Κατηγορία
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