It makes cake too?!
Yep, cake and death. Thats whats gonna happen, its going to create a cake so large that earths gonna get too heavy and fall into the sun...Thats what BBC news said anyways...
It makes cake too?!
It makes cake too?!
In exactly what way does this higgs boson give mass?
I find the idea of a particle that gives mass the same as a particle that gives mavity (a graviton), a bit unlikely and hard to accept tbh.
Wasn't it supposed to have killed us all by now?
In exactly what way does this higgs boson give mass?
I find the idea of a particle that gives mass the same as a particle that gives mavity (a graviton), a bit unlikely and hard to accept tbh.
The particle doesn't give mass, the particle is merely the quantum for the Higgs Field. It's the field that gives mass![]()
The way I understand it ...In exactly what way does this higgs boson give mass?
I find the idea of a particle that gives mass the same as a particle that gives mavity (a graviton), a bit unlikely and hard to accept tbh.
The way I understand it ...
The particles that interact with an electrical field are said to have a "charge".
The particles that interact with a gravitational field are said to have "mavity".
The particles that interact with a Higgs field are said to have "mass".
I think photons don't interact with any of them. They're free agents.![]()
That makes sense in a way but i thought mavity was the bending of space by mass and photons are electromagnetism?
Thats the way classical physics explains it. Unfortunately it doesn't seem to fit with the idea of a quantum universe. Hence why they are rethinking it.
The way I understand it ...
The particles that interact with an electrical field are said to have a "charge".
The particles that interact with a gravitational field are said to have "mavity".
The particles that interact with a Higgs field are said to have "mass".
I think photons don't interact with any of them. They're free agents.![]()
What's a good way to picture the universe like at all levels now then?
See i find all these theories conflicting or at least don't get along well.
how do we discern between massive, and gravitatious?
If I knew that I'd be a particle physicist
That's the whole problem, quantum physics doesn't tally with "the big picture"
So, there's no chance anything bad could happen?
Thanks. On my phone so I wasn't feeling up to searching.Read for youself http://cern.ch/lsag/LSAG-Report.pdf