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Message Subject Marko Rodin - Smart Lazer Technology
Poster Handle Anonymous Coward
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walk through higgs:

Getting something from nothing is one of the great developments in physics in the past century, from understanding how to create a universe from nothing, to our current understanding of how one might endow another form of nothing – namely empty space – with energy. But perhaps there is no better example relevant to our direct experience of how to get something from nothing than the phenomenon called "spontaneous symmetry breaking" that the Higgs boson represents.

If our ideas about the Higgs turn out to be true, then everything we see is a kind of window dressing based on an underlying fabric of reality in which we shouldn't exist. The particles from which we're made are massive and bind together to form protons, neutrons, nuclei, and ultimately atoms. But without the Higgs, these particles would actually be massless, like photons, which are required to move restlessly at the speed of light and cannot be confined, except perhaps in a black hole.

We have all experienced how the heaviness of an object depends on where it is located. In water, for example, with buoyant forces present, objects that are heavy on the land seem lighter. Similarly, if you try and push something through a very thick fluid it may appear heavier (giving you more resistance to the force of your pushing) than it would if you were pushing it through the air.

The Standard Model of particle physics implies that there is an otherwise invisible background "Higgs field" that permeates all of space. This field interacts with other particles with varying degrees of strength. As particles move through space, they interact with the background Higgs field, and those that interact more strongly will experience more resistance to their motion, and will act heavier. Some particles, like the photon, do not interact with the field at all, and remain massless.

In this way, the mass of everything we see is determined by the existence of this field, and if it didn't exist, essentially all particles would be massless. According to this picture, mass is an "accident" of our circumstances because we exist in a universe in which such a background field happens to have arisen.

But why a Higgs "particle"? Well, relativity tells us that no signal can travel faster than light. Incorporating this into quantum mechanics tells us that forces we think of as being due to fields like the electric field are actually transmitted between objects by the exchange of particles, and that these particles travel on average at the speed of light or slower.

Why particles transmit forces is like thinking of playing catch. If I throw a ball to you and you catch it, then you will be pushed backwards by the force of my ball, and I will be pushed backward by the act of throwing the ball. Thus we act as though we are repelling each other.

So, if there is a Higgs field, it turns out that there has to be a new particle associated with this field, and this is the Higgs particle.

This seems like a remarkable and fanciful framework, rather like concocting angels on the head of a pin. What would drive scientists to imagine such a scenario? One of the greatest theoretical successes of the last half of the 20th century has been the unification of two of the known forces in nature: electromagnetism and the weak force (responsible for the reactions that power the sun).

According to this theory, electromagnetic forces arise by the exchange of massless photons, and are long-range, whereas the short-range weak force results from the exchange of massive particles, called W and Z particles – discovered experimentally in the 1980s after they were predicted to exist in the 1960s.

In order for this theoretical unification to make mathematical sense, all three different kinds of particle would have to be massless in the underlying theory, and therefore the forces they mediated would be almost identical. However, only if the W and Z particles obtain a mass by interacting with a background field – the Higgs field – will the underlying unified theory be mathematically consistent, while at the same time implying that the two forces will appear different at the scales we measure them today.

If the Higgs particle is discovered at Cern, with a mass of 125GeV as present rumours suggest, it will be the crowning jewel of our theoretical understanding, not only of the electroweak unified theory, but also of our understanding of our own origins, and the origin of almost all mass we measure in the universe.

All is not that rosy, however. The Standard Model gives no explanation of why the masses of the Higgs, the W and Z have the scales that they do. Indeed, other arguments suggest that one needs new physics to ensure that this scale of masses is not driven up to much higher energies due to quantum mechanical effects. One of the most exciting ways in which this behaviour might be kept in check involves a new possible symmetry in nature, called supersymmetry.

If supersymmetry is manifested in the real world, the number of elementary particles would double, and it turns out that because of this one would need not one Higgs particle but two particles to do the job of giving masses to the other particles in nature. Thus, many elementary particle physicists expect to find not one Higgs particle at Cern, but two.

Since supersymmetry is an essential ingredient that is built into the more speculative string theory models that attempt to unify gravity and quantum mechanics, there is even more reason for some theorists to hope that either two Higgs particles, or new particles – the super-partners of the particles making up ordinary matter – might be discovered at the LHC.

If a single Higgs and nothing else is discovered at the LHC it will therefore be a mixed blessing. Indeed, perhaps the worst empirical possibility we theorists can imagine. We will have discovered the origin of mass, as advertised, but there will be no new experimental guidance on how to take the next step, or where to search for empirical answers to the outstanding puzzles in particle physics, from the origin of the electroweak scale, or ultimately to a possible unification of all four known forces in the cosmos.
 Quoting: observation

 Quoting: aether


so , re supersymmetry

looking at the spiritual/auric healing traditions
described by those who see auras
and their composite layers
etheric double/templates are evident on the 1st, 3rd, 5th and 7th layer of the light body
the bodies in between being more fluid

the spiritual healing traditions would describe the etheric template or double layer as the structured energy field which allows the other bodies to remain linked and allows information to be passed between these layers
the 2nd , 4th and 6th layers being described as fluid - with no definitive structure
ie are created by the transfer of information between structured layers - in a most individual fashion , depending on how we interpret/receive that information for ourselves and what we create as a result

the structured layers are the templates for organisation of matter to be 'condensed' on to - at the first layer - it created matrix fo the gross physical body to be laid down
( cf the tadpole eyes aligning electrically before condensing physically)
and for the psychic and noetic bodies to be structured and their corresponding layers

is this supersymmetry in motion ?
or am i grasping at the potential


any thoughts ?
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 7905354


But, the light bodies are in the 'superluminal', correct? So, they would exist outside of the material, whereas the supersymetry is a model based solely on the material, or luminal/subluminal realms. Actually, supersymentry is only concerned with subluminal realms, or realms that contain mass.

I believe the bold above is what I call the 'deformation' of light, or when 'light' has mass. Only after 'light' has mass would they need the theory of supersymetry.
 
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