Turque Bernstein great , best, funny and only possible response to Buck's "Force"post --here another one:
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Buck" dhamiltony2k5@ wrote: > > > > It could also signal a new fundamental force of nature, and > > the most radical change in physics for decades... Dear Buck, can happen to everybody, you're mixing it up with Higgs boson, the so called "God's particle" The Higgs Boson - A one page explanation! Simulated Higgs particle decay in the ATLAS <http://www.cern.ch/atlas> detector. For the latest on the Higgs race, there's a nice summary on the Cosmic Variance blog. http://tinyurl.com/b6oqre > > http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13000253 > > Radical? Yup, I can see myself changing pretty much > everything about my life based on this. :-) > > "The team was analysing data from collisions between > protons and their anti-matter counterparts antiprotons. > In these collisions, particles known as W bosons are > produced, along with a pair of "jets" of other particles."how about that: Simpson: Tiger away http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdBn5G7Y2RA > The thing is, these supposedly "new" particles are > not new at all. They've been around since at least > 1957, and in fact had their own musical on Broadway: > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exGJsv6ZNlo nothing can beat Leonard Bernstein [:x] but I hope you'll not close your eyes to this beauty.. Viviana Cavaliere of the Tevatron's CDF collaboration explains her group's new result in a talk April 6 at Fermilab.lol what a PR scheme > :-) >Btw "Bashing clocks together at nearly the speed of light, and from the broken parts that fall out," Feynman about accelerator physics" trying to understand what a clock is and how it works.' The Tevatron, which is slated to shut down for good in the fall <http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=tevatron-shutdown> http://tinyurl.com/3kefjha U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) had decided against a proposed three-year extension of the collider. How lucky this find should come... just thinking load [:D] Fermilab would have needed an extra $35m per year to operate the Tevatron into 2014. see No extra time for US particle laborig.paper http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12156998 publ.paper http://arxiv.org/pdf/1102.3374v1 video lecture (see photo) http://vmsstreamer1.fnal.gov/Lectures/WC/110406Cavaliere/main.htm?layout\ =default&type=ms&archived=visible&bandwidth=high&audioonly=no http://tinyurl.com/3d2lhmk