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BBC Inside Science

10 Years of the Higgs Boson

BBC Inside Science

BBC

Technology, Science

4.51.3K Ratings

🗓️ 28 July 2022

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 1964 a theoretical physicist called Peter Higgs suggested a mechanism via which elementary particles of a new theoretical scheme could obtain mass. It had been a thorny mathematical stinker in the framework that today we now call the standard model of particle physics. Ten years ago this July, the particle this mechanism predicted, the Higgs Boson, was confirmed to exist in experiments conducted at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. Prof Frank Close, whose new book - Elusive - is published this week, is a friend of Peter's. The book describes the background to Higg's idea, and how a generation of physicists worked to test it and identify it. He and Prof Malcolm Fairbairn of King's College London discuss the significance at the time, what we we've learned since, and what we might in the future. As covid cases are on the rise again in the UK, Prof Jonathan Ball gives Marnie his observations on the current variants. Prof Trevor Cox, acoustician at Salford University describes his part in a collaboration to design a new type of DIY facemask that still allows people to see your lips moving as you speak, whilst also muffling your words far less. It was developed with collaborators at University of Manchester, and also by Salford's Maker Space, and you can download plans and a video and have a go yourself at the link from our programme page. An article in Nature food recently suggested that our estimates of food miles, the carbon footprints we assign to the foods we eat, may have been underestimated and could be 3.5 times what was previously thought. But does that change the choices we make in what we buy? Presented by Marnie Chesterton Produced by Alex Mansfield

Transcript

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0:00.0

Ever wondered what the world's wealthiest people did to get so ridiculously rich?

0:05.5

Our podcast Good Bad Billionaire takes one billionaire at a time and explains exactly how they made their money.

0:11.9

And then we decide if they are actually good, bad or just plain wealthy.

0:15.5

So if you want to know if Rihanna is as much of a bad guy as she claims,

0:19.2

or what Jeff Bezos really did to become the first person in history to pocket a hundred billion dollars,

0:24.6

listen to Good Bad Billionaire with me, Simon Jack, and me, Zingsing.

0:28.5

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:32.4

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts.

0:35.7

You're listening to the podcast of Inside Science, first broadcast on radio and BBC sounds on the 30th of June 2022.

0:44.0

In the next half hour, as COVID cases rise in the UK,

0:47.7

we ask about the best strategy for maximising immunity for you and your family.

0:53.0

And yes, as that could involve more mask wearing,

0:56.2

we hear about a new design you can make yourself,

0:59.1

which is better for the one in six of us who struggle with hearing.

1:03.2

But first, we're approaching a special anniversary.

1:06.4

Cost your minds back to 2012.

1:08.7

In July, just before the buzz of Britain's Olympic Games,

1:11.8

was another buzz of a great scientific discovery.

1:15.7

Scientists working at the Surn laboratory in Switzerland say they've made a key breakthrough

1:20.3

in the understanding of physics and the universe.

1:23.0

They've discovered a new subatomic particle,

1:25.6

which they say is consistent with what they've been searching for for decades.

...

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