The Higgs Boson Explained

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2012
  • On Friday July 13 at noon, faculty and other members of the Physics Department helped the campus community understand the significance of discovering the Higgs Boson, the particle that was predicted by Peter Higgs almost 50 years ago. Mark Richards, Executive Dean of the College of Letters & Sciences, will host this discussion for the Berkeley community.
    Professors Beate Heinemann, an experimental physicist and a member of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC in CERN, Switzerland, and Lawrence Hall, a theoretical physicist and former Director of the Berkeley Center for Theoretical Physics, explained what the Higgs is, why it was predicted and how it was proven to exist. They were joined by panel members Professor Marjorie Shapiro, also a member of the Atlas experiment, Miller Fellow Josh Ruderman and PhD student and ATLAS member Louise Skinnari.

Komentáře • 389

  • @philipwesley4
    @philipwesley4 Před 10 lety +43

    good idea to skip to 10.45 if you want to miss a very lengthy set of personal introductions

    • @Bobbymohs
      @Bobbymohs Před 5 lety

      Philip Wesley V4

    • @stephenshortnacy
      @stephenshortnacy Před 3 lety +2

      10:45

    • @julianreese6021
      @julianreese6021 Před 3 lety

      A tip: you can watch movies at Flixzone. Been using them for watching loads of movies recently.

    • @shepardhudson4528
      @shepardhudson4528 Před 3 lety

      @Julian Reese definitely, been using flixzone for months myself =)

    • @landrygael8473
      @landrygael8473 Před 3 lety

      @Julian Reese Yup, I have been using flixzone for since november myself :)

  • @krischurch5677
    @krischurch5677 Před 7 lety +1

    Awesome lecture. Love the humour and audience engagement with it too. Thank you

  • @sfsoma
    @sfsoma Před 11 lety +2

    Excellent presentation and discussion. Interesting group of scientists together. Thanks

  • @brainstormingsharing1309
    @brainstormingsharing1309 Před 3 lety +1

    Absolutely well done and definitely keep it up!!! 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @Spjungen
    @Spjungen Před 11 lety

    Couldn't have said it better myself...
    *applauds*
    Kudos, my friend.

  • @2blakarrow
    @2blakarrow Před 11 lety +5

    Thank you for your support. Especially a future astrophysicist such as myself.
    My intended path: Chabot Community College -> UC Berkeley (undergrad) -> UC Santa Cruz (grad)

  • @ashok0429
    @ashok0429 Před 10 lety

    Most fascinating experience !

  • @acquiesce022
    @acquiesce022 Před 10 lety

    Thank you for the "heads up"!

  • @Dr.HazharGhaderi
    @Dr.HazharGhaderi Před 11 lety

    Nice, thanks for sharing!

  • @tellit2urmomma
    @tellit2urmomma Před 11 lety

    Can't believe I am watching this late at night and find it more entertaining than my Xbox 360

  • @Redant1Redant
    @Redant1Redant Před 11 lety +1

    This is best 18 minute explanation of why the Higgs is important I have found anywhere on the web (starts at 10min mark) . Leonard Susskind is good too, (on You Tube more detailed and 1.5 hrs)

  • @HiAdrian
    @HiAdrian Před 12 lety +1

    Marjorie Shapiro is such a great woman. She also has a very worthwhile talk on GoogleTalks.

  • @GonzoTehGreat
    @GonzoTehGreat Před 11 lety

    this is the best presentation of the discovery i have seen yet - very nicely done Berkeley!

  • @drewcullen
    @drewcullen Před 11 lety

    best reply on youtube period.

  • @geniusofmozart
    @geniusofmozart Před 11 lety +1

    Very interesting how even a discovery paves the way for at least 4 other discoveries and research topics. That's the great thing about science, there are always more questions, though it would be nice to have all of the answers one day. Solving the problem that the theoretical physicist at the start mentioned will be a prominent topic in research facilities in the future, I assume.

  • @k3vinaz0
    @k3vinaz0 Před 11 lety

    My physics professor worked on this!! He was so excited too

  • @Remedynr
    @Remedynr Před 10 lety

    Lol is it just me or does it sound at 00:14:40 like he's talking about all those "feels" on the internet recently :D reference to "I know that feel bro". Couldn't help it but start laughing

  • @jcmana
    @jcmana Před 11 lety +1

    Well, this really raised more questions than it answered. Thank you, UCBerkeleyEvents, for sharing this simposium.

  • @josephlandrut4154
    @josephlandrut4154 Před 11 lety

    THAN YOU FOR YOUR VIDEO.

  • @chriscraft77022
    @chriscraft77022 Před rokem

    no nerds can ever put it into perspective.. all these guys are are people with good memories..

  • @Imafungi123
    @Imafungi123 Před 11 lety +3

    45:29 higgs boson mass 126 x proton.....
    So what gives the higgs boson mass?

  • @dlaynd
    @dlaynd Před 12 lety

    It got me thinking we spend billions of dollars on entertainment yet have no money for science... It is outrageous to see local colleges and universities building multi-million dollar sport facilities yet their science departments go heavily underfunded for years.
    Wish you all the people who are working hard on understanding the building blocks of our universe many blessings!!!

  • @mfoucault1984
    @mfoucault1984 Před 4 lety

    I would like to have the slides of the experimental presentation, are they hanging anywhere? Thanks in advance.

  • @nmarbletoe8210
    @nmarbletoe8210 Před 9 lety +5

    there is a small but finite chance that a collision will produce a buick

    • @PatIreland
      @PatIreland Před 8 lety +1

      +N Marbletoe I am glad you specified 'finite."

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Před 8 lety

      +Patrick Ireland "finite" as in "not infinite and not zero" ... kind of a funny way to say it. i think it would be a very small buick.

  • @Sebbenify
    @Sebbenify Před 10 lety

    Ty men

  • @Critterd1
    @Critterd1 Před 11 lety

    TY

  • @iloveRedVsBlue
    @iloveRedVsBlue Před 11 lety

    I believe that everything that we discover will constantly be another stepping stone and that everything can be infinatley be broken down smaller and smaller. We will still have answers, But we will constantly have more questions as a result.

  • @carlajones8741
    @carlajones8741 Před 6 lety

    Thanks.

  • @iloveRedVsBlue
    @iloveRedVsBlue Před 11 lety

    The higgs field produces bosons (which are highly unstable) that decay almost immediately into certain matter particles. Something about the higgs field allows for the transfer of pure energy to 'matter energy'. Also why the boson is sometimes considered the 'God' particle, because its the original particle that creates all other particles.

  • @Imafungi123
    @Imafungi123 Před 11 lety

    How and why does the higgs field produce bosons? what causes it to do so? where does the "pure energy" come from? and what form is it in before it turns into 'matter energy'?

  • @Destitutebroadcast
    @Destitutebroadcast Před 10 lety +1

    Since they are approaching a quadrillion proton-proton interactions, what would happen if a created super-dense particle started attracting other particles and did not instantly vanish as theorized?

  • @LovinLearnin
    @LovinLearnin Před 12 lety

    Oh, thank you! I really appreciate you 'briefing' me. I think 'regular' may be relative. ;)

  • @oncebittentwiceshy639
    @oncebittentwiceshy639 Před 10 lety +3

    If that's how you normally "explain" things, head over to Stanford and ask Lenny Suesskind how it's done.

    • @onderozenc4470
      @onderozenc4470 Před 2 lety

      To induce is up to Mr. Sushkin, to deduce is up to you....

  • @rahulhaque5180
    @rahulhaque5180 Před 8 lety

    awesome

  • @reginapendleton
    @reginapendleton Před 9 lety

    in quantum physics isn't any particle just an observation? I thought the actual act of observation changed the action of the particle? so how can they say that they have observed the particle without considering the observation effect?

  • @sabotage2288
    @sabotage2288 Před 10 lety +2

    >tfw when no qt3.14 theoretical physicist
    feel.jpg

  • @Folkstone57
    @Folkstone57 Před 10 lety

    Question 3# : Even if it did it would dissolve long before it could do much other than eat a few nearby particles.

  • @7777Ralph
    @7777Ralph Před 11 lety

    The double slit experiment proves the universe isn't what a lot of people think it is. There is no way to make sense out of photons changing based on our observation. I see many here think up scenarios to explain it, but those hypotheses have been proven wrong. If you research more videos, you will see that. It has been proven, just exactly as this video says, that it truly is the act of observing that changes the nature of a photon. This is intelligent design folks, very clearly.

  • @hansenmv
    @hansenmv Před 10 lety +4

    God - i must be a geek.

  • @Spjungen
    @Spjungen Před 11 lety

    Good man

  • @user-ys4cy6jw1v
    @user-ys4cy6jw1v Před rokem

    Is it possible to use quantum computers to slow down what you want to catch?

  • @sanjayraoshedge8924
    @sanjayraoshedge8924 Před 8 lety

    Great lecture , i have understood most of it !please carry on , we decode dark energy and dark matter !

  • @thinkingronin6178
    @thinkingronin6178 Před 2 lety +1

    I love listening to theoretical physicists, but their experimental counterparts are far more interesting.

  • @hackerhesays731
    @hackerhesays731 Před 2 lety

    rip dora jane dunn,garu dunnsr, gary dunn jr, julie nicholas, troy nicholas jr, all the animals that quickly decomposed, what info released for good hubs used for the opposite.

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 Před 11 lety

    Try Leonard Susskind (Stanford) on the Higgs Boson here on you tube. He not only does the maths, but also explains how it works.

  • @sammyfromsydney
    @sammyfromsydney Před 11 lety

    Science is my hobby, not my profession though I do have a degree in Astronomy. Listening to that, I wonder if there could be a relationship between the Higgs instability and dark energy. This is all handwaving on my part as I do not know any of the math, but could it be that the universes' acceleration could be caused by the Higgs field. ie. the field "stretching out" and pushing space apart, thus avoiding the instability...just a thought

  • @robroberts1473
    @robroberts1473 Před 11 lety

    local colleges and universities build multi-million dollar sport facilities because they bring in multi-millions of dollars. When there are 60,000 paying fans to watch folks doing math problems then you will get some awesome buildings for that.

  • @7777Ralph
    @7777Ralph Před 11 lety

    In 1980 Gould said,
    ‘The absence of fossil evidence for intermediary stages between major transitions in organic design, indeed our inability, even in our imagination, to construct functional intermediates in many cases, has been a persistent and nagging problem for gradualistic accounts of evolution.’6

  • @skrie
    @skrie Před 11 lety

    More vids should have comments like this! :)

  • @MrKorrazonCold
    @MrKorrazonCold Před 10 lety

    "E2=mc2c4+p2c2 like dropping pebbles into a pond dividing a unit of space/ multiplied by one unit of time.
    The greater the mass/energy density inward spherical boson waves generating heat by multiplying electrical potential along cubic dynameters compressing the wave amplitude now+4-0-4+-the shorter the expanding transverse waves dividing gravity from its source.
    Energy compression pi +1=mass.de-compressing C2 forming acceleration-G from zero curvature, wave front by wave front as time unfolds."

  • @chitskirits
    @chitskirits Před 10 lety +2

    200 out of 800 trillion collisions you can see a HIGGS BOSON!!!
    This scientist,if they got it right,they deserve RECOGNITION ,for doing the IMPOSSIBLE MISSION.

  • @Folkstone57
    @Folkstone57 Před 10 lety

    A super dense particle would probably be rather massive. It might not attract any other particles & the more dense/massive the particle, the faster it will either break up into lighter particles, or if it's very dense it would exceed its Schwartchild radius & would collapse into a black-hole & then dissolve .

  • @leeryder676
    @leeryder676 Před 10 lety

    well a simple way to explain that is while a car can be compacted.. can it be stretched.

  • @ahmedgomez1
    @ahmedgomez1 Před 10 lety

    alguien ha imaginado alguna vez que la gravedad puede ser un efecto termodinamico?

  • @AlainButzberger
    @AlainButzberger Před 11 lety +1

    Yes, skipping to explanation at 10:52 is the way to go.

  • @Imafungi123
    @Imafungi123 Před 11 lety

    Consciousness as far as we know depends on the physical brain and body,and consciousness itself may have mass,if it is related to the firing of neurons and brain activity such as that,so it takes relatively lots of energy to remain conscious,according to einstein that energy can correlate to mass in some way,music depends on physical objects with mass to be vibrated against other materials and through air,the sound wave is energy,while I dont know if sound wave has mass, it can impart its energy

  • @celtlen
    @celtlen Před 12 lety

    Extra dimensions were proposed to make string theory, the best candidate for a theory of quantum gravity, coherent. There's no evidence that they exist and essentially no direct way to detect them. It's hypothesised that the LHC may detect evidence for them, via energy escaping to the extra dimensions at the highest energies. But as of today, we only know of 4 dimensions. PS. Physicists are regular people too :D

  • @99bigox
    @99bigox Před 11 lety

    "We create and perceive our world simultaneously and our mind does this so well that we don't even know it's happening. That allows us to get right into the middle of that process." Inception
    "Like an engineer or artist, who does not know his mind, but it is painted from the mind, all Dharma is so. The mind is like an engineer or artist, able to paint multiverse (spacetime). The five clusters all are born thence, there is nothing it cannot make." Scroll 19 of Flower Garland Sutra

  • @photinoman
    @photinoman Před 11 lety

    einstein's lost sp.rm found ;) Nice video, good explanations for an intoductory particle physics..

  • @sidewaysfcs0718
    @sidewaysfcs0718 Před 11 lety

    finally someone who gets how progress works.
    it's disgusting that sports athletes make more than scientists, sure they should make money for being in perfect physical shape and promoting a healthy lifestyle.
    but not as much as scientists who literally make everything in your home possible.
    the world is cruel , it does not repay true merit.

  • @VillainsVindication
    @VillainsVindication Před 11 lety +1

    man I wish there were subtitles or closed captioning on this

  • @trumanthomas4253
    @trumanthomas4253 Před 2 lety

    Can you tell me what the mini blackhole thing in my hotel room was?

  • @frotwithdanger
    @frotwithdanger Před 11 lety +1

    OMG, Louise makes physics HAWT!

  • @Destitutebroadcast
    @Destitutebroadcast Před 10 lety +1

    So much fluff on the topic, in this video I learned a small piece of the puzzle.
    1:08:49 "...I don't know any physicist who would ever use that name..." Among others, Leon Lederman (1988 Nobel laureate in physics) wrote a book entitled "The God Particle".
    I have three questions if any body has an idea, please reply-

  • @flexedsun
    @flexedsun Před 11 lety

    almost there

  • @petemchardy3605
    @petemchardy3605 Před 2 lety +1

    you can see higs bosom with a strong magefing glass

  • @LovinLearnin
    @LovinLearnin Před 11 lety

    What about the ones who smoke pot? Also is it also not a fact of parallel universes and realities streaming all around us? What is the 'facts' on multiple co-exsisting realities/universes?

  • @Imafungi123
    @Imafungi123 Před 11 lety

    How does something with no mass (higgs field) give mass to something with no mass ( Particles before they supposedly interact with the massless higgs field) ?
    When was the first moment "mass" existed, and what caused it to exist? Is mass in essence, quanta that does not travel at the speed of light?

  • @Destitutebroadcast
    @Destitutebroadcast Před 10 lety

    1.How much radiation is produced at the LHC? Please compare it to an X-ray or near a power plant.
    2.They say there have been over 800 Trillion proton-proton interactions at the LHC so far. I am not saying they did not find evidence of a Higgs Boson, but I am asking how can they tell a Higgs Boson from a computer or equipment glitch?
    3.If they increase the energy of the LHC in 2014,is there a theoretical chance (even a miniscule chance) of creating a super-dense particle (subatomic black hole)?

  • @lplostburq
    @lplostburq Před 11 lety

    I want to be a part of that!

  • @sidewaysfcs0718
    @sidewaysfcs0718 Před 11 lety

    still worth it

  • @bhojprasaddhakal7674
    @bhojprasaddhakal7674 Před 3 lety

    excellent presentation but i am unable to clear.

  • @CHistrue
    @CHistrue Před 10 lety

    Could the S-Particle be in another brane?

  • @MrKorrazonCold
    @MrKorrazonCold Před 10 lety

    "Dose that mean that everything is contracting and expanding, a locational spherical inward absorption and outward emission now, of electromagnetic Peter Higgs Bosons?
    You guys are right on the money!, moment by moment, wavefront by wavefront.. . .LOL!!!

  • @mrgoldie109
    @mrgoldie109 Před 2 lety

    An amusing but plausible explanation. Higgs boson particles are photons playing “hot potato” game. Very simple. A very hot potato, a form of dark matter, a fractal of inadvertent matter from the Big Bang. Of course, the Higgs boson will be unstable - who can hang on to this hot potato? - because it will transfer the hot potato to its nearest neighbor. The photon may or may not have temporary increase in mass depending on its state in the game aka as spin. And, sometimes the hot potato gets dropped, adding no mass to the photon, no spin.

  • @sdsti
    @sdsti Před 11 lety

    That's because people think it doesn't matter or affect their lives. Yet they are dependent on things that scientific research has made possible.

  • @WillToWinvlog
    @WillToWinvlog Před 7 lety

    Saying the Higgs field has no source is a crass assumption. It has no KNOWN source, but it certainly COULD have a source, and there are actually a few plausible theories for different sources of the Higgs field.

  • @7777Ralph
    @7777Ralph Před 11 lety

    There is a built in symbiotic relationship of sorts between the nature of light and the observer, like there is with the higgs field and gravity. What good would gravity be without the higgs field, and vise versa what good would the higgs field be without gravity?
    When it comes to photons, there is a relationship between the observer and the photon where the nature of the photon changes based on the act of observing. This means we don't even know how a photon works when it's not observed.

  • @sidewaysfcs0718
    @sidewaysfcs0718 Před 11 lety

    because that explanation is quite obvious, yes all particle are actually massless and move at the speed of light, but when the higgs interact with most of them, they move slower and gain mass.
    but it's more more hard to explain that to the public without tehnical terms.
    if you start talking about particle coupling and Z emission and spontaneous symmetry breaking and weak hypercharge, people will get bored and leave.

  • @Thundralight
    @Thundralight Před 11 lety

    Example of Something with no Mass giving mass to something with no mass
    Thought-consciousness creating music ? Does music,or sound have any type of mass?.

  • @mwhitehurst2
    @mwhitehurst2 Před 9 lety +1

    So what happens when we die? Do we have symmetric particles that could live on?

    • @gasdive
      @gasdive Před 9 lety

      No

    • @Tony-hv6mo
      @Tony-hv6mo Před 6 lety

      Particles don’t live, and we still have no idea why random spontaneous stuff has consciousness

  • @Imafungi123
    @Imafungi123 Před 11 lety

    wondering ( i am at least) what the universe is in relation to anything that could potentially exist beside the universe.. And what events could have caused its existence. you may say this is outside the realm of science and potentially unknowable , but there is an answer, there is a truth to the "important" subject matter I mentioned.

  • @MrHello888123
    @MrHello888123 Před 11 lety

    I agree

  • @flyvernon7
    @flyvernon7 Před 10 lety

    after watching this whole, very educating lecture, i have now attained my official "smart ass" card....btw the way did you know.......

  • @99bigox
    @99bigox Před 11 lety

    "The Buddha once asked the future Buddha Maitreya (founder of Consciousness Only or Yogacara School) when the mind has a thought, how many thoughts and how many intentions and consciousnesses are there? Maitreya said, 'The instant of flicking a finger, there is 320 trillion thoughts (micro thoughts), thought after thought create matter (material world.), every matter has consciousness (spiritual, informational), it is extremely fast, thus should not be attached.'" 1.28 quadrillion frames/sec.

  • @sidewaysfcs0718
    @sidewaysfcs0718 Před 11 lety

    the higgs field.
    the higgs field itself is massless, and normal particle WOULD be massless, but because these 2 categories interact, the particles we see have mass.
    only 2 particles wich don't interact with the field are photons and gluons (and possibly gravitons)

  • @mtre3854
    @mtre3854 Před 9 lety

    ScienceSunday Physics World
    Euler God Equation is a result of first mode definition of a complex number, is ok because help us a lot in Physics, but we need to know it and to be aware of it.
    Make a discussion for it I will tray to be there when I can.

  • @Stabacs
    @Stabacs Před 11 lety

    There is no faster than light neutrino? It was a mistake in measurement caused by a broken cable, as far as I heard....

  • @Imafungi123
    @Imafungi123 Před 11 lety

    Why is the higgs field needed at all? why cant the quantites of energy/matter in/of the universe have intrinsic properties of mass?

  • @elijaguy
    @elijaguy Před rokem

    lecture begin: 10:50

  • @ANDUAN93
    @ANDUAN93 Před 11 lety

    Finally, no one could explain Higgs Boson to me.

  • @cody04777
    @cody04777 Před 12 lety

    hell yeahh!!!!

  • @happylittlemonk
    @happylittlemonk Před 11 lety

    If you bought your dinner from Tesco then you would answer "Beef Burger" but you did not know it was "Horse Meat".

  • @Levon9404
    @Levon9404 Před 11 lety

    Gravity you experience is mass-less energy, now you get it. Mass of the gravity is located within inner core, gravity is an expanded energy.

  • @Opethfullcovers
    @Opethfullcovers Před 9 lety +1

    In a couple of centuries (assuming we survive for more than a century.) We'll be looking at our older models of the universe and laugh at ourselves.

    • @nmarbletoe8210
      @nmarbletoe8210 Před 9 lety

      Opethfullcovers yup, even our models will be laughing

  • @venkatbabu186
    @venkatbabu186 Před 4 lety

    What are Higgs. Extremely high spin circles comparative to the nucleus of an atom.

  • @7777Ralph
    @7777Ralph Před 11 lety

    This is gibberish:
    "The total energy of the universe is precisely zero, because gravity can have negative energy. The negative energy of gravity balances out the positive energy of matter. Only such a universe can begin from nothing. The laws of physics allow a universe to begin from nothing. You don't need a deity. Quantum fluctuations can produce a universe."
    - Lawrence Krauss, physicist, con man

  • @trumanthomas4253
    @trumanthomas4253 Před 2 lety

    Which force runs your body?

  • @Badsub
    @Badsub Před 11 lety

    Albert Einstein's final theory he was working on was his unified field theory. It's too bad he wasn't around long enough to finish it.

  • @Folkstone57
    @Folkstone57 Před 10 lety +1

    It was actually " The God-damn Particle " but his publisher veto'd the title.....