Five mysteries the Standard Model can’t explain
Our best model of particle physics explains only about 5 percent of the universe.
Our best model of particle physics explains only about 5 percent of the universe.
Breakthroughs in physics sometimes require an assist from the field of mathematics—and vice versa.
Looking for the latest info on particle physics? There’s a book for that.
This neutrino-watchers season preview will give you the rundown on what to expect to come out of neutrino research in the coming years.
Quantum entanglement, doubted by Einstein, has passed increasingly stringent tests.
Are these mass-giving particles hanging out with dark matter?
1970s video footage recorded by musician Micky Dolenz when he visited the then-nascent Fermilab is now available on YouTube.
It doesn’t seem like collisions of particles with no mass should be able to produce the “mass-giving” boson, the Higgs. But every other second at the LHC, they do.
We already know neutrinos break the mold of the Standard Model. The question is: By how much?
Particle physicists and astrophysicists employ a variety of tools to avoid erroneous results.