CBS/AP/ December 9, 2011, 3:53 PM

Scientists closing in on elusive "God particle"

Simulated data modeled for the CMS particle detector on the Large Hadron Collider.

Simulated data modeled for the CMS particle detector on the Large Hadron Collider.

GENEVA - Until now, the hunt for a yet undetected particle thought to give all other particles their mass has failed to turn up hard hard evidence to suggest either the existence or non-existence of the Higgs boson. Come Tuesday, that all may change.

Scientists at the world's largest atom smasher have new data that shows with greater certainty where to find a long-sought theoretical particle that would help explain the origins of the universe. Physicists at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research near Geneva, told The Associated Press that reams of new data will help in the search for the Higgs boson, whose existence is theorized under the main particle physics theory that explains the Big Bang.

Meanwhile, Professor John Ellis, a former head of theoretical physics at CERN, told the BBC that he expects scientists will reveal "the first glimpse" of the elusive particle at a meeting scheduled for next Tuesday.

Higgs boson hunt on hold until 2012
Collider sees hint of elusive particle's existence

The LHC experiments have already looked high and low for this missing piece," he said. "It could be that it weighs several hundred times the proton mass, but that seems very unlikely, then there's a whole intermediate range where we know it cannot be, then there's the low mass range where we actually expect it might be. There seem to be some hints emerging there... and that's what we're going to learn on Tuesday."

Finding evidence of the Higgs boson would be an enormous scientific breakthrough for the physics world and would help explain why different particles have different masses. That is because the particle itself is thought to give mass to other particles, and thus to objects and creatures in the Universe.

CERN scientists say their data from two main experiments using CERN's $10-billion Large Hadron Collider under the Swiss-French border will be made public next Tuesday, but any firm discovery will have to wait until next year. They say the data helps narrow the region of the search because it excludes some of the higher energy ranges where the Higgs boson might be found, and shows some intriguing possibilities involving a small number of "events" at the lower energy ranges.

"What's exciting is we know we're close to getting something in focus. We know we're close to the stage where we're going to see something," said Joe Incandela, a physicist who will lead one of CERN's two main experiments next year.

"We're really right at the boundary of where you might get a vague hint of something," he said. "But whenever you're talking about that small number of events, there's no real statement you can make."

CERN official website

Thousands of researchers around the world have been poring over the data generated at the collider, and many expect it to produce significant discoveries about the makeup of matter and other mysteries of the universe.

High energy beams of protons are sent crashing into each other though a 17-mile (27-kilometer tunnel) to see what happens when they collide. The protons travel at incredible speeds in conditions simulating those 1 trillionth to 2 trillionths of a second after the Big Bang.

Physicists once thought protons and neutrons were the smallest components of the atom's nucleus, but colliders showed they are made of quarks and gluons and that there are other forces and particles.

Speculation about progress in the hunt for the precise level of energy where the Higgs boson might be found had the physics world and blogosphere buzzing Thursday.

An American scientist who's collaborating in the hunt for the Higgs boson said people are really excited about the new CERN data but it will be another year before anything that is definite.

"There's a lot of drama," said Drew Baden, chair of the physics department at the University of Maryland. "It's not anything anybody can look at and say, 'There it is.' "

The hunt for the Higgs boson is different than the much-publicized research by French and Italian researchers that appeared to show subatomic neutrino particles traveling faster than light. But scientists at CERN are involved in testing that research, which would show neutrinos breaking what Nobel Prize-winning physicist Albert Einstein considered the ultimate speed barrier.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
21 Comments Add a Comment
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HolisticDNA says:
Real Time Supernatural Internet Creation
A collaborative Creation by Steve Meyer and Infinite Intelligence
The Sixth Sense - HolisticDNA
TheGod Particle
HolisticDNA Distance / Remote Energy Healing Miracle in MD!
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HolisticDNA says:
Real Time Supernatural Internet Creation
A collaborative Creation by Steve Meyer and Infinite Intelligence
The Sixth Sense - HolisticDNA
TheGod Particle
HolisticDNA Distance / Remote Energy Healing Miracle in MD!
reply
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thomasmc1957 says:
And then they unraveled space-time, and the universe ceased to ever exist.
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D-Waarheid says:
Trying to prove the Big Bang theory is much like Banging ones head against the wall.
It gives one headaches and blurred vision , done long enough, it proves pointless !
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involved_indi says:
another article to justify the spending of trillions of dollars on this research. I'm not against the research. I'm against the periodic regurgitation of this same information as if some breakthrough has been made. The public isn't that stupid. This is the 5th or 6th article I've read with essentially the same information. The first one was in March 2009. Sometimes they are about Fermi sometimes about CERN. Reminds me of the articles about "Cancer Research" that periodically appear. Got to keep those trillions flowing.
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OrangPuteh replies:
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A stupid man's report of what a clever man says is never accurate because the stupid man unconsciously translates what he hears into something he can understand. --Bertrand Russell from "A History of Western Philosophy"
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gtpillsdotcom says:
why call it a God particle? gtpillsdotcom
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Dr_Doc_dlcs says:
extraterrestrials and UFOs exist. These things are best explained by Dr Michio Kaku. http://www.ufophenom.com/
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twobuttes60 says:
I was reading in a news publication where several scientist from around the world were gathering to prove once in for all what the missing link was. They all agreed that it had been between their ears.
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D-Waarheid replies:
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LOL ! How utterly true.
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sharky77 says:
Well they also thought they found particles that were faster than what Einstein found and that proved to be false.
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RichZubaty says:
Here's an idea. Why don't they wait until they actually detect something? They've done this to us before. I'm getting close to where I might smell my favorite Christmas cherry pie. Then again, I might not.
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rwsmith29456 replies:
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They are going to show what may be, might, probably be there which is better than what we know now, which is only theory.
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