Antimatter atom trapped and measured with a laser for first time0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- December 21, 2016
Hydrogen’s antimatter counterpart has shown its true colours, and they are just what physicists ordered.
Hydrogen’s antimatter counterpart has shown its true colours, and they are just what physicists ordered.
In December of last year, scientists at the Large Hadron Collider in Europe announced startling results hinting at the existence of an undiscovered subatomic particle—one with a mass six times heavier than the Higgs boson, the particle that made headlines in 2012.
After its much heralded re-start last year, has the world’s biggest machine, the Large Hadron Collider, found a new particle?
“…The idea of [human] interactions with other universes is no longer pure fantasy.”
In December, data suggested a particle six times heavier than Higgs
It would not be described by Standard Model of particle physics
More collisions started in April 2016, to collect more data
Experts expect confirmation or refutation of its existence ‘very soon’
CERN spokesman told MailOnline it is still likely to take weeks
Switzerland celebrated the opening of the world’s longest train tunnel, a 17-year project that cuts through the Alps and cost €11 billion to construct – but all anyone’s talking about is its ridiculous opening ceremony.
A small weasel had stopped any LHC research due to getting into the transformer powering the large machine.
CERN does not break the speed of light. Old news circulating on the Internet addressed in this 2015 article.
According to Scandinavian physicists ‘cold fusion’ happens due to the formation of ultradense hydrogen/deuterium as described in the widely acclaimed work and theoretical understanding by professor Svein Olafsson (Sindre’s Phd. supervisor in Iceland) and Norway’s Professor Svein Holmlid.