WHAT HAVE WE GOT?
FIRST THE NOW ACCEPTED "BIG BANG" TO THE START OF THE UNIVERSE - THE ADMITTANCE THERE WAS AT ONE TIME NO PHYSICAL UNIVERSE - THAT IT GOT STARTED AT SOME POINT WITH SOMETHING SO SMALL IT REALLY WASN'T THERE PER SE. THE UNIVERSE CAME INTO BEING OUT OF NOTHING!!
AND THAT IS EXACTLY WHAT THE NEW TESTAMENT OF THE BIBLE TEACHES.
"WHO [JESUS THE CHRIST IN CONTEXT] IS THE IMAGE OF THE INVISIBLE GOD.....FOR BY HIM WERE ALL THINGS CREATED, THAT ARE IN HEAVEN, AND THAT ARE IN EARTH, VISIBLE AND INVISIBLE; WHETHER THEY BE THRONES, OR DOMINIONS, OR PRINCIPALITIES, OR POWERS: ALL THINGS WERE CREATED BY HIM AND FOR HIM. AND HE IS BEFORE ALL THINGS, AND BY HIM ALL THINGS CONSIST" (COLOSSIANS 1:15-17).
THOUGH IT WAS GOD THE FATHER'S WILL, IT WAS JESUS THE CHRIST WHO ACTUALLY DID THE CREATING. HE WAS THE
"WORD" AND HE SPOKE AND IT WAS DONE (JOHN 1).
SO MODERN SCIENCE HAS NOW ADMITTED THE UNIVERSE DID NOT ALWAYS EXISTM BUT CAME INTO BEING AT SOME POINT IN THE PAST. SCIENCE CALLS IT "THE BIG BANG,"
NOW SCIENCE HAS PROVED THERE IS POWER MATTER [MATTER FOR THE PURPOSE OF THE HUMAN MIND WE CALL IT] THAT IS POWER,
AND THEY NOW SEE IT IS EVERYWHERE IN THE UNIVERSE!!
Higgs mechanism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Standard model of particle physics |
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Large Hadron Collider tunnel at CERN
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In particle physics, the Higgs mechanism is essential to explain the generation mechanism of the property "mass". This is a most-important property of almost all elementary particles.[1]
According to this theory, particles gain mass by interacting with the so-called Higgs field that permeates all space. More precisely, the Higgs mechanism endows the three so-called gauge bosons Z, W+ and W- with mass. These particles would otherwise be massless; but actually they are very heavy, with values around 80 GeV/c2. But also more common particles are endowed with mass by this mechanism, e.g. the simple electron, or the quark constituents of, e.g., protons, technically through spontaneous symmetry breaking, where, however, due to the specific form of the symmetry breaking (see below), instead of the usual transverse Nambu–Goldstone bosons a longitudinal so-calledHiggs-boson appears.
The simplest implementation of the mechanism adds an extra Higgs field to the gauge theory. The specific spontaneous symmetry breaking of the underlying local symmetry, which is similar to that one appearing in the theory of superconductivity, triggers conversion of the longitudinal field component to the Higgs-boson, which interacts with itself and (at least of part of) the other fields in the theory, so as to produce mass terms for the above-mentioned three gauge bosons, and also to the above-mentioned fermions(see below).
In the Standard Model, the phrase "Higgs mechanism" refers specifically to the generation of masses for the W±, and Z weak gauge bosons through electroweak symmetry breaking.[2] The Large Hadron Collider at CERN announced results consistent with the Higgs particle on July 4, 2012 but stressed that further testing is needed to confirm the Standard Model.
The mechanism was proposed in 1962 by Philip Warren Anderson. The relativistic model was developed in 1964 by three independent groups: by Robert Brout and François Englert; by Peter Higgs; and by Gerald Guralnik, C. R. Hagen, and Tom Kibble.
The Higgs mechanism is therefore also called the Brout–Englert–Higgs mechanism or Englert–Brout–Higgs–Guralnik–Hagen–Kibble mechanism,[3] Anderson–Higgs mechanism,[4] Higgs–Kibble mechanism by Abdus Salam[5] and ABEGHHK'tH mechanism [for Anderson, Brout, Englert, Guralnik, Hagen, Higgs, Kibble and 't Hooft] by Peter Higgs.[5]
On October 8, 2013, it was announced that Peter Higgs and François Englert share the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physics "for the theoretical discovery of a mechanism that contributes to our understanding of the origin of the mass of subatomic particles, and which recently was confirmed through the discovery of the predicted fundamental particle, by the ATLAS and CMS
experiments at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider".[6]
Why the Higgs boson 'God particle' matters
First theorized 50 years ago, Higgs boson explains why particles have mass
By Jon Hembrey , CBC News Posted: Mar 15, 2013 5:18 AM ET Last Updated: Mar 15, 2013 5:16 PM ET
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