Physicists working at the Cern laboratory in Geneva have summoned colleagues from around the world to a special seminar where they will announce their latest findings.
Although they will stop short of claiming a definitive scientific discovery, their data is understood to point towards the existence of the sought-after Higgs Boson - dubbed the ?God particle.?
If the hints in the results are later proven correct, it would confirm a theory first proposed in 1964 by Peter Higgs at Edinburgh University and provide the final piece of evidence for the Standard Model, which explains how matter is composed.
The secrecy surrounding the results is such that the two separate groups searching for the subatomic particle have not been told what each other?s results show.
This means there is still a great deal of uncertainty - even among the physicists leading the search for the elusive particle - how strong the evidence for or against its existence is.
Science world awaits Cern announcement on Higgs boson - Telegraph
Webcast at 1400 CET here
Although they will stop short of claiming a definitive scientific discovery, their data is understood to point towards the existence of the sought-after Higgs Boson - dubbed the ?God particle.?
If the hints in the results are later proven correct, it would confirm a theory first proposed in 1964 by Peter Higgs at Edinburgh University and provide the final piece of evidence for the Standard Model, which explains how matter is composed.
The secrecy surrounding the results is such that the two separate groups searching for the subatomic particle have not been told what each other?s results show.
This means there is still a great deal of uncertainty - even among the physicists leading the search for the elusive particle - how strong the evidence for or against its existence is.
Science world awaits Cern announcement on Higgs boson - Telegraph
Webcast at 1400 CET here



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