The LHC may soon decipher the formation of the universe

The world's largest particle accelerator is accelerating faster than expected and may soon unravel the universe's deepest mystery.

On July 26, speaking at the International Conference on High-Energy Physics taking place in Paris, France, scientists are working with particle accelerators in Europe and the United States to report their activities. This particle accelerator is approaching the stage of creating Higgs Boson particle, also known as "God particle."

Picture 1 of The LHC may soon decipher the formation of the universe

The overview of the diagram places the LHC accelerator and a part of the pipe inside the machine.(Source: CERN)

"God" is said to contribute to the formation of the universe after the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago.

Researchers from the Large Particle Accelerator (LHC) project near Geneva (Switzerland) said that after exactly three months of experiments they had discovered nearly all the particles that modern physics knew by tissue. Standard picture. The only basic particle in the Standard Model has not been observed as "God Particle."

Mr. Rolf Heuer, General Manager of the European Center for Nuclear Research (CERN), the LHC management agency, said the experiments progressed faster than expected and are entering the stage of forming a new physics. .

In the new period, scientists can find evidence of the existence of "Gods" and the discovery of dark matter, thought to constitute one-quarter of the universe in which we Only about 5% can be observed, and 70% is dark energy not visible.

The LHC, placed under a 27km circular tunnel near the Swiss and French borders, will create a small-sized explosion by colliding particles with each other.

Currently, this accelerator is allowing particles to collide with each other at an energy level of half their maximum energy level of 7 TeV (7 million million electron volts). LHC plans to increase this energy level to 14 TeV from 2013, close to the condition that the universe was created nearly 14 billion years ago.

Meanwhile, scientists operating the US Tevatron particle accelerator, the LHC's lower and older energy accelerator, said they had narrowed down about a quarter of the "range of Gods . "./.