What's new @CERN ? Higgs boson, standard model, SUSY and neutrinos

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Uploaded by on Oct 3, 2011

What's new @CERN ? a new video programme launched on webcast.cern.ch , every first Monday of the Month. For the first one, the themes are the results of the LHC experiments about Higgs boson, standard model and supersymmetry, and also neutrinos of OPERA experiment faster than the speed of light.

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  • Yes great! Realy good, please make more videos like this. (With less "show")

  • Very nice! I liked how you did it with some light-hearted fun and still managed to keep it professional and interesting. Good job!

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All Comments (93)

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  • can I get a little let talking and get some discovories

  • @dragonoid250 I believe you fellow brother! We must change the future, but can we do this?

  • Fellow brothers and sisters, I am here to warn you about the drastic impacts that CERN will have on the future. They are secretly developing a time machine and with such power shall rule the world. The reason I know all of this is because I am from the year 2036. We must not let this happen. Sincerely, John Titor. El Psy Congroo...

  • Higgs bosons!? That's only a matter of chosing between one and another theory... boring! It's the neutrinos that are the funny little goblins: first they go get themselves a mass making the standard model barely survive -- on crutches -- then they're caught making a speeding offense. I next expect nothing less than sterile neutrinos (AKA neutral electrons) showing up their furry faces.

  • @pseudorandomly At least, Dark Matter is for the moment "of unknown origin" that I find highly suspicious! Why is it that all the dark matter is accumulated everywhere else than exactly close "enough" to Planet Earth? Nr. 2: I want the numbers for your claim on the table. Maybe you see this as dishonest, but let's gather some numbers for a _start_! So there it is, Solar-system less planets are *chosen* because we *know* they exist and haven't been identified in the least sense yet! What's more->

  • @LeonardJohnson3

    Those "several people" are ridiculously wrong, and bad at arithmetic, besides. The matter content of a star doesn't "cease to exist" when the star explodes. And, since dark matter is 5 times more prevalent than normal matter, there would have to be thousands of Jupiter-sized planets for every star. This would have observational consequences we simply don't see.

  • I hear a lot of talk but.......what have they got fro resolts that worants a 30 billion dollar price tag.... coulden't we of built a new space station for that..... think about it

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