Weighty Stuff

Weighty Stuff

As promised last week, I bit the bullet and am writing about the

Higgs boson, which brings us to Ricki Martin. He performed on

the Today show recently and drew a wildly enthusiastic

response, notably from younger females in the crowd. Let”s take

a few hundred of these young ladies place them in a large room.

I could cross through that room in 15 seconds. However, send in

Ricki Martin and a cluster of screaming fans are attracted to him.

It”s now very difficult for him to make any progress and he may

take 10 minutes or even an hour, if he makes it across at all!

For the heck of it, let”s call that initially uniformly distributed

bunch of girls a “Higgs field”. This Higgs field fills the room

and there is a definite attractive force between the field of girls

and Ricki. I don”t know his weight, but suppose Ricki masses in

at 180 pounds. When that Higgs field clusters around him, he

effectively weighs a couple thousand pounds as he walks,

dragged back by the clustered field. You could call the couple

thousand pounds his “effective mass”. At Bell Labs we talked

about the effective mass of electrons travelling through silicon.

In the silicon there are positively charged atoms that attract the

negative electron and the electron is slowed down, resulting in a

larger effective mass.

The attraction of our Higgs field of females to Ricki suggests

there”s some kind of force causing the attraction. I have no idea

what this force could be. However, the idea of fields and forces

is familiar, for example, in the area of magnetism. If we bring an

iron nail close to a strong magnet, there”s a strong force attracting

the nail to the magnet. We can see the pattern of the magnetic

field by putting a bar magnet under a piece of paper or cardboard

and sprinkling iron filings on the paper. Let”s now take a bold

step and pretend that our Higgs field uniformly fills not just a

room, but the whole universe! Naturally, our young ladies would

not survive in most places in the universe, so let”s get rid of them

but still keep some kind of attractive force. That”s what Peter

Higgs, a particle physicist at the University of Edinburgh,

proposed in the 1960s. We”ve said in earlier columns that a

vacuum really is not totally “nothing”. If Higgs is correct, the

Higgs field is one of the things found even in the emptiest

reaches of space.

Now let”s pretend we”re outside our universe and drop a proton

into the universe. Let”s be silly and pretend also that the proton

has no mass when we drop it into the universe. When the proton

enters the universe, it”s traveling through that Higgs field and, as

with Ricki, the Higgs field is attracted to and “clusters” around

the proton. Now the cluster drags on the proton and gives it an

effective mass. Repeat this with an electron and we find the

clustering isn”t as strong. The electron has a much lower

effective mass than the proton. If you wonder why the

difference, it”s like the difference between Ricki and me. He”s

young and vibrant; I”m old and decrepit. We”re two different

particles.

Why this ridiculous pretending that the proton and electron have

intrinsically no mass? Being a simple minded individual, I have

always accepted the fact that everything I see around me has

some mass associated with it. On a personal level, my own mass

during the holidays tends to increase more than I would like. As

a scientist, I”ve never questioned that protons and electrons have

different masses. That”s just the way it is. But particle physicists

don”t take such things for granted and actually want to know why

the electron weighs less than the proton. They even want to be

able to calculate the masses of all the quarks and other particles

theoretically. If they succeed in doing that, it will be an

achievement that cuts to the very essence of what we”re made of.

Actually, for many years these physicists have not been happy

with the fact that things have any mass at all. It seems that their

theories treat the fundamental particles as having no mass. You

might say, “You idiots, you just aren”t smart enough and your

theories stink!” But there”s a catch. These guys are far from

being idiots. In the 1960s, for example, three guys, working

independently, came up with theories about a fundamental

problem, the so-called “electroweak” force. Suffice to say here

that the theories deal with the weak nuclear forces involved in

radioactivity. These fellows were Abdus Salam, working in

England, and Sheldon Glashow and Steven Weinberg working in

the U.S. The three shared the 1979 Nobel Prize in physics for

their work.

One of the key results of their work was the prediction of two

new particles they called W and Z bosons. I”ll tell you about

bosons shortly. These W and Z bosons were only figments of

their imaginative theories until the 1980s. Then, with higher

energies available in accelerators and the theory in hand, the

existence of the W and Z particles was confirmed. The W and Z

bosons are, relatively speaking, monstrous particles a hundred

times heavier than a proton. They “carry” the weak nuclear

forces and are intimately involved, for example in the sun”s

nuclear reactions.

So, I shouldn”t have been surprised when I saw on the front page

of our newspaper that scientists are looking for what some have

called the “God” particle, the “Higgs boson”. Today, as were the

W and Z bosons, the Higgs boson is only a figment of the

physicists” theories. Nevertheless, the physics community will be

spending many millions of dollars in a quest to prove or disprove

its existence. Why? Whenever you have a field, there”s

generally a particle that goes with it. So, if there is such a thing

as the Higgs field, there should be a particle – the Higgs boson.

What is a boson? First, a boson is a particle that can transmit

forces. You”re dealing with zillions of bosons at this very minute

as you read this sentence! Those photons of light flooding

through your eyes are bosons. Unlike the monstrous W and Z

bosons, photons have no mass at all. Each photon can be

considered as a little wave packet having an electromagnetic

field associated with it. The field represents a force and the

energy depends on the wavelength or frequency. Shorter

wavelength blue light has more energy than longer wavelength

red light.

Bosons are gregarious. Remember 10 or 20 clowns emerging

from that small car in the circus? The electron, which is not a

boson, is antisocial, on the other hand. If you have a can of

tennis balls only three will fit in the can. Like electrons, they

don”t like to be crowded. If the tennis balls were bosons,

somehow you”d be able to pack as many as you wanted in the can

and the bosons would find a way to fit in. This is a very crude

analogy and I really should be talking quantum mechanics but

the idea is there. There”s another particle we”ve talked about that

is a boson and that”s the gluon. You may recall that gluons are

what holds the quarks together in a proton or neutron. Otherwise

we”d all fly apart! If we ever got ourselves together in the first

place. The gluons, like the photons have no mass.

Back to the Higgs field and Higgs boson and why all the fuss?

You probably know or have guessed that what the physicists are

saying is that the Higgs field is the fundamental source of all the

mass in the universe. When we said our electron and proton had

“effective masses” in the Higgs field, to us those effective masses

are the real, ordinary, everyday masses we love and cherish.

You might say, “If it”s the Higgs field that”s what gives

substance. Why worry about the Higgs boson?” Well, to

actually detect the Higgs field pervading our universe may be an

impossible task. But, if there is a Higgs boson that carries this

field and that particle can be found, it will be a monumental

confirmation of Peter Higgs” hypothesis.

The Higgs boson, if it exists, is a very heavy particle. It may

even be heavier than an iron or even a uranium atom. You might

think, “Hey, that big a particle should be easy to spot.” Not true!

When it comes to big fundamental particles, the problem is that

they aren”t stable and don”t hang around more than a few

zillionths of a second. Furthermore, in the particle accelerators,

you don”t typically see the particles themselves but only their

decay products. How to find the Higgs boson? The answer is

bigger, more powerful accelerators. Two candidates in the race

to find the Higgs are CERN in Switzerland and the Fermi

National Accelerator Facility just outside Chicago but it could be

years before any conclusive experiments are performed.

I must give credit to David Miller of University College in

London. He was one of the winners of a contest to come up with

the best one-page explanation of the Higgs boson. Being a Brit,

Miller used ex-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher at a political

worker gathering. Before using Ricki, I was tempted to use Gore

or Bush but decided that the political workers would be too

exhausted to cluster! Miller likened the Higgs boson to the

spread of a rumor across the room. As the rumor traverses the

room, clustering of the young ladies themselves sweeps across

the room like a wave. This wave, involving the clustering of the

Higgs field itself is the Higgs boson. Miller points out that

detection of the Higgs boson would nail down the existence of

the Higgs field. But he also points out that the possibility that

we”re all in a Higgs field but there”s no such thing as a Higgs

boson. If not, we may never know for sure why we have mass.

I don”t know about you, but dealing with such weighty matters

has exhausted me. I”m going to take a nap and close my eyes to

those zillions of bosons. My wife read this and said she felt the

same way! Maybe I”ll write about hornet juice next week.

Allen F. Bortrum