Boredom: symmetry, god and x-factor

Also at The Guardian.

I gather that my last post wasn’t very popular- I emailed it to my mother and she emailed me back with a story about Benedict Cumberbatch (it was a good one) and thanks for the advent calendar I sent to her cat.

This one will be worse. It is about Symmetry.

The preparation for the seminar I gave today involved 3.5 hours of ensuring that the font was acceptable and one hour reading  Peter Kosso: ‘the epistemology of broken symmetries’. I keep coming back to this paper, because I don’t really understand why I believe in the Higgs mechanism. And I do. I’ve got money on it. Well, It’s an each-way bet.

Why have we put so much faith in the standard model and the Higgs mechanism? There is loads of evidence in its favor, but there are also enormous problems. They hit you in the stomach. As scientists we have no choice but to make our work evidence-based: take the information we have, build a model of the world from it, and then continue. And then adjust, and continue. I wish we could think harder and I wish more people were involved, and I wish that sitting and thinking about things was given more value relative to that of ‘x-factor’.

The Higgs mechanism is a construction that our minds (actually just a few of them- Higgs and Goldstone and perhaps a couple of others who don’t have a boson named after them) have been able to imagine. A mechanism by which the beautiful, perfect symmetry that lives in our mathematical equations can be reconciled with the lumpy world we live in. If the symmetry of these equations was not broken, and the world was left as it was probably ‘created’, then there would certainly be no life, no stars or planets, no mass at all in fact.

Kosso talks about the symmetry breaking of the Higgs mechanism, and also about the observed symmetry breaking in superconductors, and he asks questions that we physicists don’t, but I think they are important.

He wants to know this: if we can create (out of our imaginations and experiments and maths) a way for this to work; if we can provide the world with a rock-steady explanation of how we get from the maths to the people, then does that establish that the maths is good, that the universe longs for symmetry, or does it merely protect this possibility from immediate scorn. We humans jump on symmetry like we jump on god. Maybe there are hard limits on our intelligence.

Posted in Particle Physics, Philosophy, Physics, Science | Tagged | Comments Off on Boredom: symmetry, god and x-factor

Firing a quark through the early universe

Latest results from the Large Hadron Collider use quarks and gluons to “X-ray” the nuclear soup we came from.

At The Guardian. See also Chapter 4.6 of Smashing Physics.

Posted in Physics, Science | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Firing a quark through the early universe

Five things I learnt when shadowing an MP

By Emily Nurse: On being a scientist paired with an MP, and what she learned from the experience.

At The Guardian.

Posted in Politics, Science Policy | Comments Off on Five things I learnt when shadowing an MP

Don’t wear your colours here..

riotsI’ve spent the last 48 hours enthralled by the goings on at the Argonne “Analysis Jamboree”. I’m not really much of a one for these things… my more senior colleagues doze and my more junior colleagues tap loudly on their laptops; facebooking, writing code, who knows. Sometimes I wonder what the senior ones dream about.. particularly in the weekly lunchtime seminars, where the average age of an attendee is about 2,609.

Continued on The Guardian.

Posted in Particle Physics, Physics, Physics Stories, Science | Tagged | Comments Off on Don’t wear your colours here..