Sentences with phrase «predicted by the standard model»

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which this month is preparing to smash protons together at CERN near Geneva, Switzerland, for its third full season, is looking for the definitive trace of the only particle predicted by the standard model still to be discovered — the Higgs boson, giver of mass.
Physicists look for results inconsistent with those predicted by the Standard Model to expand knowledge of the physical world — but that didn't happen here.
«Its existence was predicted by the standard model of particle physics and the fact that there's — we got a glimpse of it, it looks like it may very well be there — is a real victory for that model of science where you test, you put forward conceptual models of the way the world or the universe works and test those models against the observations and see the extent to which they can predict new observations and when they do, it gives you increased confidence in the models.
This is 40 times larger than the imbalance predicted by the standard model.
Many physicists would be thrilled if the Higgs had such exotic «spin - parity,» as it would point to new phenomena not predicted by the standard model.
Rates of certain decays don't quite match those predicted by the standard model.
Such a particle would be «much more thrilling than the Higgs boson», says Christoffer Petersson, a theoretical physicist at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden — the Higgs was already predicted by the standard model of particle physics when it was discovered in 2012.

Not exact matches

[5][6] The theory could potentially explain why a mysterious repulsive form of energy known as the «cosmological constant», and which is accelerating the expansion of the universe, is several orders of magnitude smaller than predicted by the standard Big Bang model
The standard model has been tested by experiments countless times, and it has never failed to predict what physicists would see.
«Many previous studies have shown that people's political views can not be predicted by standard economic models,» Petersen explains.
Last year, the LHC blasted out hints of an unexpected new fundamental particle — potentially the first one in decades not predicted by physicists» standard model of fundamental forces and particles.
The mathematical symmetries of the resulting equations predict three families of particles, as described by the standard model of physics, though the third family would behave a bit differently.
They hope to firm up tantalizing hints from an earlier incarnation of the experiment, which suggested that the particle is ever so slightly more magnetic than predicted by the prevailing standard model of particle physics.
One of the major problems faced by the standard form of this model is that it has predicted a star formation rate - speed at which new stars are born - which is far too big.
Standard solar models predict both the temperature at the Sun's core and the number of neutrinos generated by the nuclear reactions there.
There are several ways to produce them, as predicted by the theoretical framework known as the Standard Model, and the most common one was the first one discovered: a collision in which the strong nuclear force creates a pair consisting of a top quark and its antimatter cousin, the anti-top quark.
For several of these stars, we also measure the photospheric rotation period and find that the rotation and dip periods are the same, as predicted by standard «disk - locking» models.
His model predicted, in different fields of medical research, rates of wrongness roughly corresponding to the observed rates at which findings were later convincingly refuted: 80 percent of non-randomized studies (by far the most common type) turn out to be wrong, as do 25 percent of supposedly gold - standard randomized trials, and as much as 10 percent of the platinum - standard large randomized trials.»
It claimed to predict where I would fall on the five - factor personality model, which won widespread adoption by psychologists starting in the 1980s as a standard inventory of universal traits known as «the Big Five.»
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