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  • If you've had any interested in physics at all you've heard about a thing called the

  • Higgs boson.

  • But just what is it then why is it interesting?

  • In 1964 a physicist by the name of Peter Higgs

  • took some ideas that were floating around at the time,

  • added an insight or two of his own, and proposed that there was an energy field

  • that permeated the entire universe.

  • This energy field is now called the "Higgs field."

  • The reason he proposed this field was that nobody understood why some

  • subatomic particles had a great deal of mass

  • while others had little and some had none at all!

  • The energy field that Higgs proposed would interact

  • with the sub-atomic particles and give them their mass. Very massive particles

  • would interact a lot of the field while massless particles wouldn't interact at all.

  • To better understand the idea, we can use the analogy of water and swimmers.

  • In our analogy the water serves the role

  • of the Higgs field.

  • A barracuda, being supremely streamlined, interacts only slightly with

  • the field and can move through it very easily.

  • The barracuda would then be similar to a low-mass particle.

  • In contrast, my buddy Eddie, no stranger to doughnuts

  • can only move very slowly through the water.

  • In our analogy, Eddie is a massive particle made massive by interacting a lot with

  • the water.

  • The lightest of the familiar subatomic particles is the electron, while in the subatomic

  • world the king of mass is the top quark.

  • It weighs about as much as an entire atom of gold,

  • about three hundred and fifty thousand times more than the electron!

  • I'd like to stress that we believe the top quark is not more massive because

  • it's bigger. It's not!

  • In fact, we believe that both the top quark and the electron are exactly the same size!

  • Indeed, they both have zero size!

  • The top quark is more massive than the electron simply because it interacts

  • more with the Higgs field. Actually,

  • if the Higgs field didn't exist,

  • neither of these particles would have any mass at all!

  • Now, in the press

  • you don't hear about the Higgs field but rather the Higgs boson.

  • How are these two things related?

  • The Higgs boson is the smallest bit of the Higgs field.

  • To understand how that works we should again return to water.

  • Everyone knows what water is.

  • If you're immersed in it you know that water is everywhere. It's a continuous medium

  • and there are no holes in it.

  • We also know that water is made of molecules - specifically H20.

  • If you hold these two ideas in your head with the realization that water consists

  • of countless individual molecules you can now begin to appreciate

  • the Higgs boson.

  • The Higgs field that gives subatomic particles their mass is made of countless individual

  • Higgs bosons, just like water is made of individual molecules.

  • You should keep in mind that the Higgs boson hasn't been discovered yet, and

  • what I'm describing is simply the most popular idea as to why subatomic

  • particles have the masses that they do.

  • As I speak

  • my colleagues and I are studying data taken at huge particle accelerators to see if

  • this idea is true.

  • Stay tuned!

  • [music]

[music]

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