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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Sawyer to participate in 10th anniversary of Higgs boson discovery celebration at CERN

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Dr. Lee Sawyer, Director of  Louisiana Tech’s Chemistry and Physics programs and Professor of  Physics, will celebrate the 10th anniversary of the discovery of the  Higgs boson particle at the CERN (European Organization for Nuclear  Research) Large Hadron Collider (LHC) on June 30. The celebration,  coordinated by the United States LHC Users Association (USLUA), will  feature distinguished guests and virtual tours.

As part of the celebration, Sawyer will lead a 10-minute virtual tour  of the ATLAS experiment control room at CERN’s LHC. The virtual tour,  scheduled for 1:20 to 1:30 p.m. CST, will be available to the public via  Zoom and streamed in the Integrated Engineering and Science Building Atrium on Tech’s campus.

Louisiana Tech faculty, post-doctoral researchers, and students were  among the international cadre of physicists who proved the existence of  the Higgs boson, sometimes called the “God particle,” nearly 10 years  ago. The particle, produced within the Higgs field, gives mass to  building block particles – like electrons and quarks – found throughout  the universe. The result of more than 30 years of construction and  planning and tens of thousands of research hours, proof of the Higgs  boson is one of the most important discoveries in physics and the most  important discovery in particle physics this century.

The 2012 Louisiana Tech team included Physics Professors Sawyer, Dr.  Markus Wobisch, and Dr. Z.D. Greenwood (now retired), postdoctoral  researchers Dr. Matthew Tamsett and Dr. Catrin Bernius, graduate  students Ram Dhullipudi, Arirvan Sircar, Rajiv Subramaniam, Alex  Johnson, Khadeejah Alghadeer, and David Palma, and undergraduate student  Andrew Touchet.

Researchers at the LHC’s ATLAS and CMS (Compact Muon Solenoid)  experiments created Higgs bosons by colliding protons at the highest  energies achieved in an accelerator until they discovered the range for  the Higgs boson to appear.

“As a data collector, I was at CERN weeks before the announcement,”  Sawyer said of the work that led to the discovery. “As one of the teams  in charge of the quality of our data, we were urged to approve as much  data as possible for our scientists to analyze. That’s a good example of  how these large experiments work – the people who run the detectors and  certify the data play as important a role as the ones who make the  final plots.”

“The discovery of the Higgs boson particle is one of the most  important discoveries of our time, and I’m proud that Louisiana Tech and  the College of Engineering and Science played a role in its detection,”  COES Dean Dr. Hisham Hegab said. “The research that proved the  existence of the Higgs boson changed our understanding of the universe,  and the research that Dr. Sawyer and Dr. Wobisch are currently working  on with CERN and the ATLAS experiment will further impact particle  physics and how science defines matter. I’m excited that our faculty are  at the forefront of such monumental work and that they provide  Louisiana Tech Physics students with opportunities to engage in such  game-changing research.”

July 4, CERN will hold additional talks on the anniversary of the discovery.

Source: https://www.latech.edu/2022/06/29/sawyer-to-participate-in-10th-anniversary-of-higgs-boson-discovery-celebration-at-cern/

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