The First Particle Physics Evidence of Physics Beyond the Standard Model?
StartsWithABang writes It's the holy grail of modern particle physics: discovering the first smoking-gun, direct evidence for physics beyond the Standard Model. Sure, there are unanswered questions and unsolved puzzles, ranging from dark matter to the hierarchy problem to the strong-CP problem, but there's no experimental result clubbing us over the head that can't be explained with standard particle physics. That is, the physics of the Standard Model in the framework of quantum field theory. Or is there? Take a look at the evidence from the muon's magnetic moment, and see what might be the future of physics.
I'm a bit biased, but consider finding non-zero neutrino mass (via neutrino oscillations) as the first "beyond the standard model" evidence. Slashdot carried that story in its infancy, way back in 1998.
Also worth pointing out that TFA is talking about an experiment in construction that hopes to push the g-2 result past 5 sigma. It's not there yet, although 4.something sigma is still pretty darn good. Just 14 years late to the party.
> Why do physicists insist on treating gravity as a force?
Because everything else works that way.
> Since Einstein, we know gravity is the curvature of space-time
No, since Einstein we know that Einstein's model is that gravity is the curvature of space-time.
Before Einstein, we thought it was a force between objects, or objects and a space-filling field.
There's no reason to suggest one model is inherently "more correct" than the other. Personally, I *like* the geometric model more, which almost certainly means it's wrong.
Exactly the same, it's just the file is C:\Windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
Gravity can be formulated as a gauge theory, like the other forces in Standard Model. It's just a different mathematical representation of General Relativity, and it also captures the gravity-as-curvature idea quite neatly. You don't see it that often because the math gets a little tricky, unless you use something like Geometric Algebra, which made it easy enough for Master's courses.
Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
Actually, the good news is that the experiment is definitely happening! They moved the ring to Fermilab last year and are busy setting it up to run. You can read more about it here: Muon g-2 at Fermilab. They even have a Facebook page.
The Win hosts file path +4 informative? This is informative! :) Block ads and other nasty stuff via hosts file on Win/Mac/Linux.