DailyDirt: Always More To Discover…
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
The universe is just incredibly vast and full of stuff we’re only scratching the surface of detecting. Every so often, though, there are some folks who think we’ve learned it all — or that there’s not much more left to figure out. But there’s always more. The pace of technology might not advance fast enough for us to be able to continue to discover new things at the rate we’ve been doing so, but the “peak science” event probably hasn’t happened yet (or may not happen at all).
- The Higgs boson was detected in 2012, but there might be a heavier elementary particle that could disrupt the Standard Model in physics. The evidence is far from conclusive, but more data is on the way, and physicists should be able to determine if this new blip is some weird instrument fluke or a real particle in the near future. [url]
- Pessimistic physicists could argue that experimental particle physics is over — the Standard Model is verifiable, and if we can’t find more particles, it could be very difficult to come up with more explanations for things that we can never actually measure. Isn’t it convenient that physicists are recently finding more particles? [url]
- Physicists had a pretty good year in 2015. The field of physics got an upgrade to the Large Hadron Collider, more telescopes looking for gravity waves and dark matter, and recognition for over 1,300 physicists working on the understanding of neutrinos. Also, plans for a new International Linear Collider could lead to a next-generation particle accelerator — for smashing electrons and positrons — built in Japan. [url]
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Filed Under: higgs boson, ilc, international linear collider, large hadron collider, lhc, neutrino, peak science, physics, science, standard model
Comments on “DailyDirt: Always More To Discover…”
Gravity Waves!
The detection of gravity waves are about to be announced. Science FTW.
Indeed it is. Too convenient. It’s a false flag set up by the National Science Foundation. Three letter acronym? Yep. Starts with ‘NS’? Yep. ‘A’ & ‘F’ are somewhat similar looking letters? Yes, a bit. Notice waveforms collapsing when they should be in an indeterminate state? Yes. No way waveforms collapse like that on their own. Inside job!
Seems like a solid body of evidence to me. What more could anyone possibly want?
I'm quite confident that 'Betteridge's Law' applies to the 2nd story.
I know that “past performance is never an indication of the future”.
Even though, as has happened every time that someone has said that we can stop as all physics has been discovered, I’m quite confident that some new idea will emerge that will revolutionize physics.