Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "ฮิกส์โบซอน" in Thai language version.
Even in the most specialized circles, the new particle discovered in July is not yet being called the "Higgs boson". Physicists still hesitate to call it that before they have determined that its properties fit with those the Higgs theory predicts the Higgs boson has.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (ลิงก์)'As a layman, I would say, I think we have it,' said Rolf-Dieter Heuer, director general of CERN at Wednesday's seminar announcing the results of the search for the Higgs boson. But when pressed by journalists afterwards on what exactly 'it' was, things got more complicated. 'We have discovered a boson – now we have to find out what boson it is'
Q: 'If we don't know the new particle is a Higgs, what do we know about it?' We know it is some kind of boson, says Vivek Sharma of CMS [...]
Q: 'are the CERN scientists just being too cautious? What would be enough evidence to call it a Higgs boson?' As there could be many different kinds of Higgs bosons, there's no straight answer.
[emphasis in original]
[ถาม] ทำไมนักวิทยาศาสตร์อนุภาคจึงสนใจมากเกี่ยวกับอนุภาคฮิกส์?
[ตอบ] OK, จริง ๆ แล้ว พวกเขาไม่ได้สนใจมากนัก สิ่งที่พวกเขาสนใจจริง ๆ ก็ตือ สนาม ของฮิกส์ เพราะว่ามันสำคัญ มาก [เน้นในของเดิม]
The Higgs field: so important it merited an entire experimental facility, the Large Hadron Collider, dedicated to understanding it.
In terms usually reserved for athletic achievements, news reports described the finding as a monumental milestone in the history of science.
The Higgs field: so important it merited an entire experimental facility, the Large Hadron Collider, dedicated to understanding it.
In terms usually reserved for athletic achievements, news reports described the finding as a monumental milestone in the history of science.
Even in the most specialized circles, the new particle discovered in July is not yet being called the "Higgs boson". Physicists still hesitate to call it that before they have determined that its properties fit with those the Higgs theory predicts the Higgs boson has.
'We've never seen an elementary particle with spin zero,' said Tony Weidberg, a particle physicist at the University of Oxford who is also involved in the CERN experiments.