Higgs Particle (Harry Cliff) | AI Podcast Clips
LLFBM-CON9E • 2020-04-30
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Kind: captions Language: en I mean wasn't the Higgs called the god particle at some point it was by a guy trying to sell popular science books yeah yeah but by me I am because when I was hearing it I thought it would I mean that would solve a lot of the unify a lot of our ideas of physics as well as my notion but maybe you can speak to that was it as big of a leap is it as a god particle is it a Jesus particle which which you know what's the big contribution of pigs in terms of this unification power yeah I mean to understand that I really helps know the history a little bit so when the what we call electroweak theory was put together which is where you unify electromagnetism with the weak force and the Higgs is involved in all of that so that theory which was written in the mid seventies predicted the existence of four new particles the w+ boson the w- boson the Z boson and the Higgs boson so there were these four particles that came with the theory that were predicted by the theory in 1983-84 the W's and the z particles were discovered at an accelerator at CERN called the super proton synchrotron which was a seven kilometer particle collider so three of the bits of this theory had already been found so people are pretty confident from the 80s that the Higgs must exist because it was a part of this family of particles that this theoretical structure only works if the Higgs is there so what then happens so you this question why is the LHC the size it is yes well actually the tunnel that the LHC is in was not built for the LHC it was built for a previous accelerator called the large electron positron Collider so that that was bit began operation in the late 80s early 90s they basically did that's when they dug the 27 kilometer tunnel they put his accelerator into it the collider that fires electrons and anti electrons at each other electrons and positrons so the purpose of that machine was well it was actually to look for the Higgs that was one of the things it was trying to do it didn't man I didn't have enough energy to do it in the end but the main thing it was it studied the W and the Z particles at very high precision so it made loads of these things previously can you make a few of and the previous accelerator so you can study these really really precisely and by studying their properties you could really test this electroweak theory that had been invented in the seventies and really make sure that it worked so actually by 1999 when this machine turned off people knew well ok you never know until you until you find the thing but people were really confident this electroweak theory was right and the the Higgs almost the Higgs or something very like the Higgs had to exist because otherwise the whole thing doesn't work it'd be really weird if you could discover and these particles they all behave exactly just theory tells you they should but somehow this key piece of the picture is not there so in a way it depends how you look at it the discovery of the Higgs on its own is it's awfully a huge achievement in many both experimenting and theoretically on the other hand it's this it's like having a jigsaw puzzle where every piece has been filled in you've this beautiful image there's one gap and you kind of know that that piece must be there something right so yeah so the discovery in itself although it's important is not so interesting it's like a confirmation of the obvious yes at that point but what makes it interesting is not that it just completes a standard model which is a theory that we've known had the basic layout offs for 40 years or more now um it's that the Higgs actually is a is a unique particle is very different to any of the other particles understand a model and it's a theoretically very troublesome particle there are a lot of nasty things to do with the Higgs but also opportunities so that we basically don't really understand how such an object can exist in the form that it does so there are lots of reasons for thinking that the Higgs must come with a bunch of other particles or that it's perhaps made of other things so it's not a fundamental particle that it's made of smaller things I can talk about that if you like a bit that's that's still a notion so yeah so the Higgs might not be a fundamental particle that there may be some in my oh man so that that is an idea it's not you know it's not been demonstrated to be true but I mean there's all of these ideas basically come from the that it's a this is this is a problem motivated a lot of development in physics in the last 30 years or so and there's this basic fact that the higgs field which is this field that's everywhere in the universe this is the thing that gives mass to the particles and the higgs field is different from ever all the other fields in that let's say you take the electromagnetic field which is you know if we actually were to measure the electric field in this room we would measure all kinds of stuff going on because there's light there's going to be microwaves and radio waves and stuff but let's say we could go to a really really remote part of empty space and shield it and put a big box around it and then measure the electromagnetic field in that box the field will be almost zero apart from some little quantum fluctuations but basically it goes to naught the Higgs field has a value everywhere so it's a bit like the hole it's like the entire of space has got this energy stored in the Higgs field which is not zero it's it's finite it's got some it's a bit like having the the temperature of space raised to you know some background temperature and it's that energy that gives mass it's the particles so the reason that electrons and quarks have mass is through the interaction with this energy that's stored in the Higgs field now it turns out that the precise value of this energy has has to be very carefully tuned if you want a universe where interesting stuff can happen so if you push the Higgs field down it has a tendency to collapse to what there's a tenon if you do you're sort of naive calculations there are basically two possible likely configurations for the Higgs field which is either it's zero everywhere in which case you have a universe which is just particles with no mass that can't form atoms and just fly by at the speed of light or it explodes to an enormous value what we call the Planck scale which is the scale of quantum gravity and at that point if the Higgs field was that strong even an electron will become so massive that it would collapse into a black hole and then you have a universe made of black holes and nothing like us so it seems that the the strength of the Higgs field is to achieve the value that we see requires what we call fine-tuning of the laws of physics you have to fiddle around with the other fields in the standard model and their properties to get it to this right sort of Goldilocks value that allows atoms to exist this is deeply fishy people really dislike this well yeah I guess what so what would be a so to two explanations one there's a God that designed this perfectly and two is there's an infinite number of alternate universes and we'll just happen being the one in which life is possible yeah complexity so when you say I mean life any kind of complexity that's not either complete chaos or black holes yeah yeah I mean how does that make you feel what do you make that has such a fascinating notion that this perfectly tuned field that's the same everywhere yeah is there what do you make of that yeah well you make of that I mean yeah you laid out two of the possible explanations is not some well yeah I mean well someone yeah some cosmic creator way yeah let's fix that to be at the right level that's one possibility I guess it's not a scientifically testable one but you know theoretically I guess it's possible sorry to interrupt but there could also be not a designer but couldn't there be just I guess I'm not sure what that would be but as some kind of force that that some kind of mechanism by which this this this kind of field is enforced in order to create complexity basic basically forces that pull the universe forwards an interesting complexity I mean yeah I mean those ideas I don't really subscribe to them as I'm saying it sounds really stupid no I mean yeah and there are definitely people to make those kind of arguments you know there's ideas that I think it's Lise Mullins idea one I think that you know universes are born inside black holes and so universe is that behave like Darwinian evolution of the universe where universes give birth to other universes and of universes where black holes can form are more likely to give birth to more universes so you end up with universes which have similar laws I mean I don't know whatever but why I talked to dr. Lee recently understand this podcast and he's he's a reminder to me that the physics community has like so many interesting characters yeah it's fascinating yeah anyway so so me as an experimentalist I tend to sort of think these are interesting ideas but they're not really testable so I tend not to think about very much so I mean going back to the science of this there wasn't that there is an explanation there was a possible solution to this problem of the Higgs which doesn't involve multiverses or creators fiddling about with the laws of physics if the most popular solution was something called supersymmetry which is a theory which is involves a new type of symmetry of the universe and in fact it's one of the last types of symmetries that is possible to have that we haven't already seen in nature which is a symmetry between force particles and matter particles so what we call fermions which held before the matter particles and bosons which are force particles and if you have supersymmetry then there is a superpartner for every particle in the standard model and the without going to the details the effect of this basically is that you have a whole bunch of other fields and these fields cancel out the effect of the standard model fields and they stabilize the Higgs field at a nice sensible value so in supersymmetry you naturally without any concurring about with the constants of nature or anything you get a Higgs field with a nice value which is one we see so this is one of the written and supersymmetry has also got lots of other things going for it it predicts the existence of a dark matter particle which would be great it you know it potentially in suggests that the the strong force and the electroweak force unify high-energy so lots of reasons people thought this was a productive idea and when the LHC was just before it was turned on there was a lot of hype I guess a lot of an expectation that we would discover these super partners because and particularly the main reason was that if if supersymmetry stabilizes the higgs field at this nice Goldilocks value these super particles should have a mass around the energy that we're probing at the LHC around the energy of the Higgs so it was kind of thought you discovered the Higgs you probably discover superpartners so once you start creating ripples in this fixed field you should be able to see these kinds of you should be yeah super fields would be there at the very beginning I said we're probing the vacuum what I mean is really that you know okay let's say these super fields exist the vacuum contains super fields they're they're these super symmetric fields if we hit them hard enough we can make them vibrate we see super particles come flying out that's the sort of that's the idea I hope that's the whole of mine but we haven't but we haven't so so far at least I mean we've had now a decade of data taking at the LHC no signs of super partners have supersymmetric particles have been found in fact no signs of any physics any new particles beyond the standard model have been found so supersymmetry is not the only thing that can do this there are other theories that involve additional dimensions of space or potentially involve the Higgs boson being made of smaller things being made of other particles that's an interesting you know I haven't heard that before that's really that's an issue but could you maybe linger on that like what what could be what could Higgs particle be made of well so the the oldest I think the original ideas about this was these theories called Technicolor which were basically like an analogy with the strong force so the idea was the Higgs boson was a bound state of two very strongly interacting particles that were a bit like quarks so like quarks but I guess higher energy things with a super strong force so not the strong force but a new force that was very strong and the Higgs was a bound state of these these objects and the Higgs wouldn't principle if that was right would be the first in a series of Technicolor particles Technicolor I think not being a theorist but it's not it's basically not done very well particularly since the LHC found the Higgs that kind of it rules out you know a lot of these Technicolor theories but there are other things that are a bit like Technicolor so there's a theory called partial composite nurse which is an idea that some of my colleagues that Cambridge have worked on which is a similar sort of idea that the Higgs is a bound state of some strongly interacting particles and that the standard model particles themselves the more exotic ones like the top quark are also sort of mixtures of these composite particles so it's a kind of extension to the standard model of which explains this problem with the Higgs bosons Goldilocks value but also helps us understand we have we're in a situation now again a bit like the periodic table where we have six quarks six leptons in this kind of you can range in this nice table and there you can see these columns where the patterns repeat and you're good okay maybe there's something deeper going on here is that you know and and so this would potentially be something this partial composite loss theory could explain sort of enlarge this picture that allows us to see the whole symmetrical pattern and understand what the ingredients why do we have wind so one of the big questions in particle physics is why are there three copies of the matter particles so in what we call the first generation which is what we're made of there's the electron the electron neutrino the up quark on the down quark they're the most common matter particles in the universe but then there are copies of these four particles in the second and the third generations so things like muons and top quarks and other stuff we don't know why we see these patterns we have no idea where it comes from so that's another big question you know can we find out the deeper order that explains this particular tape period table of particles that we see is it possible that the the deeper order includes like almost a single entity so like something that I guess like string theory dreams about is this is this part is this essentially the dream is to discover something simple beautiful unifying yeah I mean that is the dream and it I think for some people for a lot of people it still is the dream so there's a great book by Steven Weinberg who is one of the theoretical physicists who was instrumental in building the standard model so he came up with some others with the electroweak theory the theory that unified electromagnetism and the weak force and here at this book I think it was towards the end of the 80s Early 90s called dreams of a final theory which is a very lovely quite short book about this idea of a final unifying theory that brings everything together and I think you get a sense reading his book written at the end of 80s and early 90s that there was this feeling that such a theory was coming and that was the time when string theory had been was was very exciting so string theory there's been this thing called the superstring revolution and theoretical physical very excited they discovered these theoretical objects these little vibrating loops of string that in principle not only was a quantum theory of gravity but could explain all the particles in the standard model and bring it all together and you as you say you have one object the string and you can pluck it and the way it vibrates gives you these different notes each of which is a different particle so it's a very lovely idea but the problem is that well there's a there's a few people discover the mathematics is very difficult so people have spent three decades and more trying to understand string theory and I think you know if you spoke to most string theorists they would probably freely admit that no one really knows what string theory is yeah I mean there's been a lot of work but it's not really understood and the other problem is that string theory mostly makes predictions about physics that occurs at energies far beyond what we will ever be able to probe in the laboratory yeah probably ever by the way so sorry they take a million tangents but is there room for complete innovation of how to build a particle collider that could give us an order of magnitude increase in in the kind of energies or do we need to keep just increasing the size of thing I mean maybe yeah I mean there are ideas but to give you a sense of the Gulf that has to be bridged so the LHC collides particles at an energy of what we call fourteen terror' electron volt so that's basically equivalent of you accelerated a proton through 14 trillion volts that gets us to the energies where the Higgs and these weak particles live there very massive the the scale where strings become manifest is something called the Planck scale which i think is of the order 10 to the hang on get this right is 10 to the 18 Giga electron volts so about 10 to the 15 tera electron volts so you're talking you know trillions of times more energy more the Tenno at 10 to the 15 they tend to the fourteenth larger it's a very big number so you know we're not talking just an order of magnitude increase in energy we're talking fourteen orders of magnitude energy increase so to give you a sense of what that would look like were you to build a particle accelerator with today's technology bigger or smaller and then our solar system as start the size of the galaxy the galaxy so you need to put a particle accelerator that circled the Milky Way to get to the energies where you would see strings if they exist so there's a fundamental problem which is that most of the predictions of the unified these unified theories of quantum theories of gravity only make statements that are testable are energies that we will not be able to probe let and barring some unbelievable you know completely unexpected technological or scientific breakthrough which is almost impossible to imagine you never never say never but it seems very unlikely yeah I can just see the news story Elon Musk decides to build a particle collider the size of our it would have to be we'd have to get together with all our galactic neighbors to pay for it I think you feel like CERN on on mega steroids you
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