US researchers tantalizingly close to Higgs boson “evidence”

Researchers at the Tevatron particle accelerator in Illinois say they’ve come about as close as you can get to finding evidence of the Higgs boson particle. The announcement comes amid rumors that researchers at the Large Hadron Collider will make a notable announcement this week.

At the moment, the Higgs boson is still hypothetical and largely based on the idea that if it did exist and had certain characteristics, wider theories of how particle physics work would make sense.

Coverage of the work so far has generally used the analogy of “hunting” for where the Higgs boson is hiding. In reality, this has meant running experiments based on it having a range of possible masses. “Finding” it would not mean literally spotting it, but rather detecting its effects.

So far the search has been the slightly odd case of “no news is good news.” As each experiment comes back without “success”, scientists narrow the range of masses at which it might exist, thus meaning we get ever closer to the point of either finding that it does exist or having to conclude it likely doesn’t exist and having to have a major rethink of particle physics.

The LHC project has worked on the basis that the Higgs boson has a mass measurable between 115 and 135 Gigaelectronvolts (GeV). Last December two separate LHC experiments narrowed down the likely range to 125-126 GeV, though that was later revised to 122.5-127.5 GeV.

Now researchers on Tevatron (pictured) have released their final findings from data produced before the accelerator ceased operations in September thanks to budget cuts. They report that it’s likely they have actively inferred the Higgs boson’s existence at 125 GeV (as opposed to showing it doesn’t exist at any other mass).

Depending on the calculation you use, and whether you put extra weight on Tevatron producing the same result from two different experiments, the chances of the result being down to chance is somewhere between one in a few hundred and one in a thousand. The best non-scientific explanation comes from Rob Roser, who worked on the Tevatron project and told the Wall Street Journal that “I’d be willing to bet your house it’s real but not enough to bet my house.”

The level of confidence that physicists have in their results being accurate rather than a freak occurrence is stated in sigma. Tevatron signal of the Higgs boson existing is rated at around a 2.9 sigma level. In terms of being “official”, a signal has to be rated at 3 sigma before it can be formally labelled as evidence. It takes 5 sigma (a one in a million probability of the result being chance) before signal formally becomes a “discovery.”

Officials at CERN, home to the LHC, are rumored to be preparing to make an announcement tomorrow. The speculation is that this will be that they have also detected a signal of Higgs boson rather than just narrowing down its likely range. If this turns out to be at 3 or even 5 sigma, it may mean that even though Tevatron “spotted” the Higgs boson first, LHC gets the official credit for finding evidence or even discovering it first.



Wedding Theme: “Hodge-Podge of Awesome”

Is it just me or has there been an incredible surge of awesome geeky wedding stuff on the net these days?

I mean there was the mine craft themed wedding, the Star Wars themed one we encountered and not to mention the numerous cakes (Alien vs. Predator, Star Trek Voyager, Battlestar…I could go on)

Well Deyanna and Dustin realized that there was too much awesome in the world and it would be foolish to attempt to limit themselves. So they went for a “hodge-podge of awesomeness” and what a mash-up of awesome it was: from zombies to Storm Troopers in tuxes to readings from Calvin and Hobbes, the day was sure to be one of the most memorable of the couple’s lives.

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See more photos and read more details about the wedding at Offbeat Bride. I suggest you read their vows – they’re so beautiful and geeky, it brought a few tears to my eyes.

“As a symbol of their united front, they shall be slaying a zombie head together.” And sending it flying!

I also just realized their wedding invites could have totally said “We invite you to the D&D wedding”. I don’t know if they did, but the possibility in itself is exciting enough for me.

[Photos by Rachel whoever | More of the wedding at Offbeat Bride | Via The Mary Sue]

Warhol-Inspired Han Solo Shirt

We all know that Han shot first.

Remind people of that with this Warhol-inspired tee. They’ll be seeing it DOUBLE!

Don’t worry, fellas, it comes in manly sizes, too!

[Via Headline Shirts]



Life-Size, 3-D Zombie Targets Bleeds Red!

Let’s get real here: When the Zombie Apocalypse happens, it’s not gonna be sheets of paper rising up from their trash cans and recycling bins trying to paper cut us to death.

So why shoot paper zombie targets, when you can shoot a mushy replica THAT ACTUALLY BLEEDS??

Zombie Industries created life-sized, 3-D tactical zombie targets for your shooting pleasure.

At a price of $89.99, these fellas aren’t cheap, but I’m sure they’re damn rewarding to shoot! Buy them here — there are even different kinds!

[Via Zombies]

Spitfire Engine Rebuild Stop Motion Video

I am not a gearhead or whatever clever title equates to people who like cars, I am, however, incredibly fascinated with the way things work. I build my own computers, I am obsessed with Legos, and I am very decent at home renovations. Strangely I still stick my head under the hood when something goes wrong with my car, as if staring at it will suddenly expose some miracle fix. Note: It does not.

Anyways, Redditor “Goodoldluke” decided to buy a new engine for his Triumph Spitfire. And to be sure to remember where each and every part goes, he spent 11 months reconditioning the thing, took approximately 3000 pictures of the process, and made a stop-motion video of the whole thing.

The fitting end shows the inevitable leftover parts, but miraculously the car still runs.

As if the effort itself wasn’t a bold undertaking, but that he took the time to compile the images into an entertaining video documenting his journey just made it so much more amazing.

Nerd Alert Designs Brings “Geek Chic” to a Whole Level

Based in San Antonio, Texas, Nerd Alert Designs takes the ubiquitous (& exhausted) phrase “geek chic” and flips it on its pointy ear.

Most of their creations were designed with the businesswoman or party girl in mind — classy and stylish, yet still waving the geek flag with pride!

The “Dr. Oooooooooooooooooo” is a pencil skirt with tiny, sky blue phone boxes.

The “Who’s Your Daddy?” romper incorporates a cotton, Darth Vader-printed fabric.

The “XXX-Men Nightie” is for the geek girl who like to get flirty after dark.

They also created this costume, which combines the species of Wookiee and Ewok.

Crack those knuckles and get to clickin’! Shop their store!

[Via Etsy]

The Chemistry of Fireworks

Since the 4th of July is just around the corner, here’s an interesting video featuring John Conkling, a leading expert in the field of pyrotechnics, who talks all about the chemical composition of fireworks, how mortars work, how colors are formed, and he even gives a couple of explosive demos. Check it out!

Thanks Kirk!