Has Large Hadron Collider rival Tevatron found elusive ‘God particle’?
Washington, July 13 (ANI): The Tevatron, the most powerful huge particle accelerator in the world after the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) – housed at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia, Illinois – is rumoured to have discovered the Higgs boson, or so-called “God particle”. Tommaso Dorigo, a physicist at the University of Padua, writes about the speculation in his blog. “It reached my ear, from two different, possibly independent sources, that an experiment at the Tevatron is about to release some evidence of a light Higgs boson signal,” The Telegraph quoted Prof Dorigo, as writing in the post, titled “Rumors about a light Higgs”. He added: “Some say a three-sigma effect, others do not make explicit claims but talk of a unexpected result.” Even as the LHC has bagged the larger share of media attention, the Tevatron has been quietly plugging away in the search for Higgs. In the 27 years since it was first completed it has discovered a quark and observed four different bar